Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 1264-1272, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
The central projections of the stretch receptor neurons of crayfish: segmental gradients of synaptic probability and strength
MJ Bastiani and B Mulloney
Zoology Department, University of California, Davis 95616.
The 20 stretch receptor neurons (SRs) of the crayfish abdomen send axons
into the CNS that then project both to the brain and to the last abdominal
ganglion, G6 (Bastiani and Mulloney, 1988). In G6, we recorded
intracellularly from different kinds of neurons postsynaptic to SR axons.
In a sample of 100 postsynaptic neurons, 59 synapsed with both SR1 and SR2
axons, 19 synapsed only with SR1 axons, and 22 synapsed only with SR2
axons. Most monosynaptic connections in G6 were excitatory and behaved like
typical chemical synapses. The EPSPs showed moderate facilitation but could
be depressed about 50% by protracted stimulation at 20 Hz or more. In
individual postsynaptic neurons, comparisons of synapses made by SRs that
originated from different abdominal segments and from each side of the
abdomen revealed gradients of probability of synaptic connection and of
relative sizes of EPSPs; SRs originating in anterior segments were less
likely to synapse with most postsynaptic neurons than were SRs originating
in posterior segments, and the EPSPs caused by these anterior SRs tended to
be smaller. Similarly, SRs contralateral to the postsynaptic neuron were
less likely to make a connection, and the EPSPs they caused tended to be
smaller than those caused by ipsilateral SRs. Some local interneurons in G6
had reversed anterior-posterior gradients in EPSP amplitude. Calculations
of shape indices for PSPs from SRs originating in different segments and
measurements of the maximum shunting by preceding PSPs from other SR axons
indicated that neither electrotonic decrement in the postsynaptic neurons
nor shunting could account fully for the observed gradients in PSP
strength.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)