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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 3 March 1999, pp. 1261-1273
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Sussex Centre for Neuroscience, School of Biological Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QG, United Kingdom
Staras, Kevin,
György Kemenes, and
Paul R. Benjamin.
Electrophysiological and behavioral analysis of lip touch as a
component of the food stimulus in the snail Lymnaea.
Electrophysiological and video recording methods were used to
investigate the function of lip touch in feeding ingestion behavior of
the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis. Although this stimulus was
used successfully as a conditioning stimulus (CS) in appetitive
learning experiments, the detailed role of lip touch as a component of
the sensory stimulus provided by food in unconditioned feeding behavior
was never ascertained. Synaptic responses to lip touch in identified
feeding motoneurons, central pattern generator interneurons, and
modulatory interneurons were recorded by intracellular electrodes in a
semi-intact preparation. We showed that touch evoked a complex but
characteristic sequence of synaptic inputs on each neuron type. Touch
never simply activated feeding cycles but provided different types of
synaptic input, determined by the feeding phase in which the neuron was
normally active in the rhythmic feeding cycle. The tactile stimulus
evoked mainly inhibitory synaptic inputs in protraction-phase neurons and excitation in rasp-phase neurons. Swallow-phase neurons were also
excited after some delay, suggesting that touch first reinforces the
rasp then swallow phase. Video analysis of freely feeding animals
demonstrated that during normal ingestion of a solid food flake the
food is drawn across the lips throughout the rasp phase and swallow
phase and therefore provides a tactile stimulus during both these
retraction phases of the feeding cycle. The tactile component of the
food stimulus is strongest during the rasp phase when the lips are
actively pressed onto the substrate that is being moved across them by
the radula. By using a semi-intact preparation we demonstrated that
application of touch to the lips during the rasp phase of a
sucrose-driven fictive feeding rhythm increases both the regularity and
frequency of rasp-phase motoneuron firing compared with sucrose applied alone.
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