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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 6 June 2002, pp. 2889-2895
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Physiology and Biophysics and 2Neuroscience Program, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida 33136; and 3Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907
Burrell, Brian D.,
Christie L. Sahley, and
Kenneth J. Muller.
Differential Effects of Serotonin Enhance Activity of an
Electrically Coupled Neural Network. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 2889-2895, 2002. Networks of electrically coupled
neurons play an important role in coordinating activity among widely
distributed neurons in the CNS. Such networks are sensitive to
neuromodulation; but how modulation of individual cells affects
activity of the entire network is not well understood. In the CNS of
the medicinal leech, the S interneuron (S-cell) forms a network of
electrically coupled neurons where each S-cell is linked to its two
neighboring S-cells by electrical synapses. An action potential
initiated in one cell is carried the length of the animal along this
S-cell chain. The S-cell network is of interest because it is crucial
for sensitization and dishabituation of the whole-body shortening
reflex, although it is not necessary for reflexive shortening itself.
Mechanosensory stimuli that produce shortening will directly elicit a
train of action potentials by the S-cell network. This activity
reflects the sum of action potential initiations in several S
interneurons within the chain. The activity was enhanced by serotonin
(5HT) in terms of both the total number of action potentials initiated and the average frequency of these initiations. Increases in evoked activity were accompanied by differential changes in the rates of
action potential initiation in individual S-cells. 5HT only weakly
enhanced initiations in S-cells that made a large contribution to the
network-level response, while initiations in other, less active,
S-cells were strongly enhanced by 5HT. This neurotransmitter also
modulated the pattern of how activity was distributed throughout the
network. 5HT-induced changes in activity patterns of the S-cell network
may represent an important component of learning-related neuroplasticity in the leech shortening reflex.
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