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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 2 February 2000, pp. 712-722
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, United Kingdom
Hedwig, Berthold
Control of Cricket Stridulation by a Command Neuron: Efficacy
Depends on the Behavioral State. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 712-722, 2000. Crickets use different song patterns
for acoustic communication. The stridulatory pattern-generating
networks are housed within the thoracic ganglia but are controlled by
the brain. This descending control of stridulation was identified by
intracellular recordings and stainings of brain neurons. Its impact on
the generation of calling song was analyzed both in resting and
stridulating crickets and during cercal wind stimulation, which
impaired the stridulatory movements and caused transient silencing
reactions. A descending interneuron in the brain serves as a command
neuron for calling-song stridulation. The neuron has a dorsal soma
position, anterior dendritic processes, and an axon that descends in
the contralateral connective. The neuron is present in each side of the
CNS. It is not activated in resting crickets. Intracellular
depolarization of the interneuron so that its spike frequency is
increased to 60-80 spikes/s reliably elicits calling-song
stridulation. The spike frequency is modulated slightly in the chirp
cycle with the maximum activity in phase with each chirp. There is a
high positive correlation between the chirp repetition rate and the interneuron's spike frequency. Only a very weak correlation, however, exists between the syllable repetition rate and the interneuron activity. The effectiveness of the command neuron depends on the activity state of the cricket. In resting crickets, experimentally evoked short bursts of action potentials elicit only incomplete calling-song chirps. In crickets that previously had stridulated during
the experiment, short elicitation of interneuron activity can trigger
sustained calling songs during which the interneuron exhibits a spike
frequency of ~30 spikes/s. During sustained calling songs, the
command neuron activity is necessary to maintain the stridulatory
behavior. Inhibition of the interneuron stops stridulation. A transient
increase in the spike frequency of the interneuron speeds up the chirp
rate and thereby resets the timing of the chirp pattern generator. The
interneuron also is excited by cercal wind stimulation. Cercal wind
stimulation can impair the pattern of chirp and syllable generation,
but these changes are not reflected in the discharge pattern of the
command neuron. During wind-evoked silencing reactions, the activity of
the calling-song command neuron remains unchanged, but under these
conditions, its activity is no longer sufficient to maintain
stridulation. Therefore stridulation can be suppressed by cercal inputs
from the terminal ganglia without directly inhibiting the descending
command activity.
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