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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 5 May 2000, pp. 2473-2481
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York 10032; and 2Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029
Xin, Yuanpei,
Klaudiusz R. Weiss, and
Irving Kupfermann.
Multifunctional Neuron CC6 in Aplysia Exerts
Actions Opposite to Those of Multifunctional Neuron CC5. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 2473-2481, 2000. The controls
of somatic and autonomic functions often appear to be organized into
antagonistic systems. This issue was explored in the bilaterally paired
C cluster neuron, CC6, which was found to have properties that
suggested that it might function antagonistically to the previously
identified multiaction neuron, CC5. Similar to CC5, CC6 is an
interganglionic neuron that sends its sole axon to the ipsilateral and
contralateral pedal and pleural ganglia. Synaptic inputs to CC6 were
opposite to those of CC5. For example, CC6 receives inhibitory inputs
from mechanical touch to the lips and tentacles and is excited by
firing of C-PR, a neuron involved in the control of a head extension
response. Also during rhythmic buccal mass movements CC6 receives
synaptic inputs that are out of phase with those received by CC5. CC6
is inhibited during a fictive locomotor program, whereas CC5 is
excited, but unlike CC5, the inputs to CC6 are not rhythmic. CC6 has
extensive mono- and polysynaptic outputs to many identified and
unidentified neurons located in various central ganglia. Firing of CC6
evoked ipsilateral contraction of the transverse muscles of the neck,
whereas CC5 contracts longitudinal neck muscles. CC6 monosynaptically
inhibits the pedal artery shortener neuron, whereas CC5
monosynaptically excites the pedal artery shortener neuron. Specific
motor neurons in the pedal ganglion receive synaptic inputs of opposite
sign from CC5 and CC6. Although the inputs and most of the effects of
CC6 were opposite to those of CC5, both cells were found to produce
polysynaptic excitation of the abdominal ganglion neuron RBhe, a cell
whose activity excites the heart. CC5 and CC6 appear to be
multifunctional neurons that form an antagonist pair.
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