Consistency of interneuronal group formation in response to stimulation of identified cells
In crayfish stimulation of abdominal positioning interneurons (APIs) recruits other interneurons producing various abdominal movements. We investigated whether: (1) the same API from different preparations activated a similar number or group of interneurons, (2) different APIs activated different gr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Comparative Physiology 1998-04, Vol.182 (4), p.509-519 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In crayfish stimulation of abdominal positioning interneurons (APIs) recruits other interneurons producing various abdominal movements. We investigated whether: (1) the same API from different preparations activated a similar number or group of interneurons, (2) different APIs activated different groups, and (3) repeated stimulation of an API consistently affected a similar set of interneurons. To quantify the similarities and differences of the recruited interneuronal groups we compared the number of interneurons affected, their firing frequencies, and motor outputs. Three types of APIs (Curly Q, L and T) were identified and each type was stimulated in three preparations. Our results showed that for the Curly Q and L cells, each cell type activated interneuronal groups that were statistically similar in number and firing frequency. The T cell activated interneuronal groups that were more variable. Some APIs generally provided a repeatable motor output; all did not. The interneuronal groups activated by the Curly Q, L and T cells were very different from each other. Repeated stimulation of one Curly Q cell affected similar although not identical sets of interneurons. These data suggest that repeated motor outputs could be produced by a similar but not identical group of cells. |
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ISSN: | 0340-7594 1432-1351 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s003590050198 |