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J Neurophysiol 77: 3340-3354, 1997;
0022-3077/97 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 77 No. 6 June 1997, pp. 3340-3354
Copyright ©1997 The American Physiological Society

Primary Afferent Depolarizations of Sensory Origin Within Contact-Sensitive Mechanoreceptive Afferents of a Crayfish Leg

A. R. Marchand1, W.J.P. Barnes2, and D. Cattaert1

1 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Laboratoire Neurobiologie et Mouvements, 13402 Marseille Cedex 20, France; and 2 Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland

Marchand, A. R., W.J.P. Barnes, and D. Cattaert. Primary afferent depolarizations of sensory origin within contact-sensitive mechanoreceptive afferents of a crayfish leg: properties, quantal analysis, and role in presynaptic integration. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 3340-3354, 1997. Recordings from the central branches of single identified dactyl sensory afferent (DSA) neurons in a crayfish in vitro preparation were performed to study modifications of the sensory message occurring before the first central synapse. These afferents comprised hairs and force-sensitive mechanoreceptors with phasic and phasotonic response characteristics in the terminal segment (dactyl) of the crayfish leg. More than one afferent spike size was often observed in intracellular recordings from these afferents, thus indicating the presence of electrical coupling between the central processes of DSA fibers. Additionally, in identified DSA fibers with large spike sizes, primary afferent depolarizations (PADs) of up to 15 mV were observed, which sometimes triggered antidromic spikes in the afferent. Nevertheless, PADs were clearly inhibitory, because they shunted the afferent spikes. They exhibited the following properties. First, each PAD was preceded by an afferent spike from a neighboring hair, indicating that the PADs had a sensory rather than central origin. Second, PADs could follow high frequencies of afferent discharges without failure, a property suggestive of monosynaptic connections, but because PAD latencies varied by ±0.5 ms it is more likely that they were mediated by a disynaptic pathway. Third, although PADs were evoked in an extremely reliable manner, their amplitude varied in a quantal manner. Most unitary PADs were the result of the release of <12 quanta, the mean quantal content lying between 4 and 5; quantal size was large, ~1 mV. Fourth, PADs showed facilitation in some fibers, whereas in others they became much smaller when occurring at brief intervals. We suggest that PADs may be an efficient and parsimonious way to limit sensory inflow in space and time, allowing the crayfish to identify precisely both weak and strong mechanical stimuli.




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