Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 10, 3896-3904, Copyright © 1990 by Society for Neuroscience
Different classes of glutamate receptors and GABA mediate distinct modulations of a neuronal oscillator, the medullary pacemaker of a gymnotiform electric fish
M Kawasaki and W Heiligenberg
Neurobiology Unit, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093.
Gymnotiform electric fish generate distinct communicatory signals by
modulating the rate of their electric organ discharges (EODs). Each EOD is
triggered by a command pulse from the medullary pacemaker nucleus (PN),
which contains pacemaker cells and relay cells. The firing rate of this
nucleus is modulated by inputs from the diencephalic prepacemaker nucleus
(PPN). The NMDA receptor blocker APV and the kainate/quisqualate receptor
blocker CNQX, administered to the PN, suppress different types of
modulations, indicating that different classes of glutamate receptors
mediate the generation of different modulations. A comparison of the 2
genera, Hypopomus and Eigenmannia, reveals that sustained modulations, such
as smooth rises in the rate of pacemaker cell firing and the selective
silencing of the relay cells (only observed in Hypopomus), are mediated by
NMDA receptors, whereas the brief and rapid acceleration, called "chirp" or
"decrement burst," is mediated by kainate/quisqualate receptors.
Application of the GABA blocker bicuculline reveals that the 2 genera
differ in the mechanism by which they slow the firing rate of their
pacemaker. Whereas Hypopomus uses GABAergic inhibition to slow down and
ultimately silence its pacemaker cells, Eigenmannia reduces tonic,
APV-sensitive excitation originating from its PPN and lacks GABAergic
inhibition in the PN.