Conditional dendritic oscillators in a lobster mechanoreceptor neurone
1. Intra- and extracellular recordings were made from in vitro preparations of the lobster (Homarus gammarus) stomatogastric nervous system to study the nature and origin of pacemaker-like activity in a primary mechanoreceptor neurone, the anterior gastric receptor (AGR), whose two bilateral stretch...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1997-02, Vol.499 (Pt 1), p.161-177 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Intra- and extracellular recordings were made from in vitro preparations of the lobster (Homarus gammarus) stomatogastric
nervous system to study the nature and origin of pacemaker-like activity in a primary mechanoreceptor neurone, the anterior
gastric receptor (AGR), whose two bilateral stretch-sensitive dendrites ramify in the tendon of powerstroke muscle GM1 of
the gastric mill system. 2. Although the AGR is known to be autoactive, we report here that in 20% of our preparations, rather
than autogenic tonic discharge, the receptor fired spontaneously in discrete bursts comprising three to ten action potentials
and repeating at cycle frequencies of 0.5-2.5 Hz in the absence of mechanical stimulation. Intrasomatic recordings revealed
that such rhythmic bursting was driven by slow oscillations in membrane potential, the frequency of which was voltage sensitive
and dependent upon the level of stretch applied to the receptor terminals of the AGR. 3. Autoactive bursting of the AGR originated
from an endogenous oscillatory mechanism in the sensory dendrites themselves, since (i) during both steady, repetitive firing
and bursting, somatic and axonal impulses were always preceded 1:1 by dendritic action potentials, (ii) hyperpolarizing the
AGR cell body to block triggering of axonal impulses revealed attenuated somatic spikes that continued to originate from the
two peripheral dendrites, (iii) the timing of burst firing could be phase reset by brief electrical stimulation of either
dendrite, and (iv) spontaneous bursting continued to be expressed by an AGR dendrite after physical isolation from the GM1
muscle and the stomatogastric nervous system. 4. Although a given AGR in vitro could switch spontaneously from dendritic bursting
to tonic firing and vice versa, exogenous application of micromolar (or less) concentrations of the neuropeptide F1 (TNRNFLRFamide)
to the dendritic membrane could rapidly and reversibly switch the receptor firing pattern from repetitive firing to the bursting
mode. Exposure of the somatic and axonal membrane of the AGR to F1 was without effect, as were applications of other neuroactive
substances such as serotonin, octopamine and proctolin. 5. We conclude that, as for many oscillatory neurones of the central
nervous system, the intrinsic activity pattern of this peripheral sensory neurone may be dynamically conferred by extrinsic
modulatory influences, presumably according to computational demands. Moreover, the ability of the AGR t |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1997.sp021918 |