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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 792-808
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Biology, University of York, York YO10 5YW, United Kingdom
Vehovszky, Ágnes and
Christopher J. H. Elliott.
Activation and Reconfiguration of Fictive Feeding
by the OctopamineContaining Modulatory OC Interneurons in the
Snail Lymnaea. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 792-808, 2001. We describe the role of the
octopamine-containing OC interneurons in the buccal feeding
system of Lymnaea stagnalis. OC neurons are swallowing phase
interneurons receiving inhibitory inputs in the N1 and N2 phases, and
excitatory inputs in the N3 phase of fictive feeding. Although the OC
neurons do not always fire during feeding, the feeding rate is
significantly (P < 0.001) higher when both SO
and OC fire in each cycle than when only the SO fires. In 28% of
silent preparations, a single stimulation of an OC interneuron evokes
the feeding pattern. Repetitive stimulation of the OC interneuron
increases the proportion of responsive preparations to 41%. The OC
interneuron not only changes both the feeding rate and reconfigures the
pattern. Depolarization of the OC interneurons increases the feeding
rate and removes the B3 motor neuron from the firing sequence.
Hyperpolarization slows it down (increasing the duration of N1 and N3
phases) and recruits the B3 motor neuron. OC interneurons form synaptic
connections onto buccal motor neurons and interneurons but not onto the
cerebral (cerebral giant cell) modulatory neurons. OC interneurons are
electrically coupled to all N3 phase (B4, B4Cl, B8) feeding motor
neurons. They form symmetrical connections with the N3p interneurons
having dual electrical (excitatory) and chemical (inhibitory)
components. OC interneurons evoke biphasic synaptic inputs on the
protraction phase interneurons (SO, N1L, N1M), with a short inhibition
followed by a longer lasting depolarization. N2d interneurons are
hyperpolarized, while N2v interneurons are slowly depolarized and often
fire a burst after OC stimulation. Most motor neurons also receive
synaptic responses from the OC interneurons. Although OC and N3p
interneurons are both swallowing phase interneurons, their synaptic
contacts onto follower neurons are usually different (e.g., the B3
motor neurons are inhibited by OC, but excited by N3p interneurons).
Repetitive stimulation of OC interneuron facilitates the excitatory
component of the biphasic responses evoked on the SO, N1L, and N1M
interneurons, but neither the N2 nor the N3 phase interneurons display
a similar longer-lasting excitatory effect. OC interneurons are
inhibited by all the buccal feeding interneurons, but excited by the
serotonergic modulatory CGC neurons. We conclude that OC interneurons
are a new kind of swallowing phase interneurons. Their connections with the buccal feeding interneurons can account for their modulatory effects on the feeding rhythm. As they contain octopamine, this is the
first example in Lymnaea that monoaminergic modulation and
reconfiguration are provided by an intrinsic member of the buccal
feeding network.
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