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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 3 September 2000, pp. 1673-1676
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
RAPID COMMUNICATION
1The Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden; 2A. N. Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Moscow State University, Moscow 119899, Russia; 3Institute for Nonlinear Science, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0402; and 4Institute of Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 101447, Russia
Deliagina, T. G.,
G. N. Orlovsky,
A. I. Selverston, and
Y. I. Arshavsky.
Asymmetrical Effect of GABA on the Postural Orientation in
Clione. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 1673-1676, 2000. The marine mollusk Clione
limacina, when swimming, normally stabilizes the vertical body
orientation by means of the gravitational tail reflexes. Horizontal
swimming or swimming along inclined ascending trajectories is observed
rarely. Here we report that GABA injection into intact
Clione resulted in a change of the stabilized orientation
and swimming with a tilt of ~45° to the left. The analysis of
modifications in the postural network underlying this effect was done
with in vitro experiments. The CNS was isolated together with the
statocysts. Spike discharges in the axons of two groups of motoneurons
responsible for the left and right tail flexion, as well as in the
axons of CPB3 interneurons mediating signals from the statocyst
receptors to the motoneurons, were recorded extracellularly when the
preparation was rotated in space. Normally the tail motoneurons of the
left and right groups were activated with the contralateral tilt of the
preparation. Under the effect of GABA, the gravitational responses in
the right group of motoneurons and in the corresponding interneurons
were dramatically reduced while the responses in the left group
remained unchanged. The most likely site of the inhibitory GABA action
is the interneurons mediating signals from the statocysts to the right
group of tail motoneurons. The GABA-induced asymmetry of the left and
right gravitational tail reflexes, observed in the in vitro
experiments, is consistent with a change of the stabilized orientation
caused by GABA in the intact Clione.
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