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1 Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, United States
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bcmulloney{at}ucdavis.edu.
During forward swimming, periodic movements of swimmerets on different segments of the crayfish abdomen progress from back to front with the same period. Information encoded as bursts of spikes by coordinating neurons in each segmental ganglion is necessary for this coherent organization. This information is conducted to targets in other ganglia. When an individual coordinating neuron is stimulated at different phases in the system's cycle of activity, the timing of motor output from other ganglia may be altered. In models of this coordinating circuit, we assumed that each coordinating neuron encodes information about the state of the local pattern-generating circuit in its home ganglion, but is not part of that local circuit. We tested this assumption by stimulating individual coordinating neurons of two kinds - ASCE and DSC - at different phases under two conditions: with the target ganglion functional, and with the target ganglion silenced. Blocking a DSC neuron's target ganglion did not alter its negligible influence on the output from its home ganglion; the Phase-Response Curves (PRC) remained flat. Blocking an ASCE neuron's target ganglion significantly affected its influence on the output from its home ganglion. We had predicted that ASCE's modest phase-dependent influence would disappear with the target silenced, but instead the amplitude of the PRCs increased significantly. Thus we have two different results: DSC neurons conformed to prediction based on the models' assumptions, but ASCE neurons showed an unexpected property, one partially masked when the bidirectional flow of information between neighboring ganglia is operating normally.
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