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Volume 16, Number 14,
Issue of July 15, 1996
pp. 4518-4528
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
A Pair of Identified Interneurons in Aplysia that Are
Involved in Multiple Behaviors Are Necessary and Sufficient for the
Arterial-Shortening Component of a Local Withdrawal Reflex
Yuanpei Xin1,
Klaudiusz
R. Weiss2, and
Irving Kupfermann1
1 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, College of
Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, and 2 Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mt. Sinai
Medical Center, New York, New York 10029
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
A bilateral pair of cerebral interneurons, called CC5, contribute
to the generation of a number of different behaviors involving head
movements. Each cell sends its axon to the ipsilateral and
contralateral pedal and pleural ganglia. A weak tactile stimulus to the
head excites the ipsilateral CC5; a strong stimulus excites both the
ipsilateral and contralateral cells. Firing of CC5 produces powerful
shortening of the ipsilateral pedal artery (PA) by means of
monosynaptic excitation of the pedal artery shortener (PAS) neuron, the
single motor neuron for the artery. A weak touch to a tentacle excites
the ipsilateral PAS and evokes a local withdrawal response accompanied
by shortening of the ipsilateral PA. In vivo recording of
the pedal artery nerve (PAn) showed that PAS was activated bilaterally
during defensive head withdrawal elicited by a strong stimulus and was
activated unilaterally by a weak stimulus. The responses were
eliminated by cutting the ipsilateral cerebral-pleural connective
(C-PLC). Electrical stimulation of the cerebral-pleural connective
provided evidence that all of the excitatory input to PAS via this
connective is provided by CC5. A variety of experimental results
indicates that during a local withdrawal reflex of the tentacle, CC5 is
necessary and sufficient for the unilateral PA-shortening component of
the response and therefore functions as a command neuron for a
component of the behavior. The data suggest that during defensive head
withdrawal, the two CC5 neurons may act conjointly as a two-neuron
command system that is necessary and sufficient for the bilateral
arterial-shortening component of the behavior.
Key words:
command;
withdrawal reflex;
Aplysia;
mechanosensory;
feeding;
head turning
INTRODUCTION
A major task in neuroscience is to understand the
functioning of the nervous system in terms of the activity of
individual neurons or aggregates of neurons. Studies of invertebrates
and vertebrates have shown that certain interneurons appear to be
extraordinarily focused in their function (Kupfermann and Weiss, 1978 ;
Nolen and Hoy, 1984 ; Arshavsky et al., 1988 ; Didomenico and Eaton,
1988 ; McCrohan and Kyriakides, 1989 ; Delaney and Gelperin, 1990 ; Young
and Yamane, 1992 ; Celebrini and Newsome, 1994 ; Frost and Katz, 1996 )
and that there are a small number of cells that appear to act as
so-called command neurons, i.e., individual cells that meet the
criteria of necessity and sufficiency for a particular behavior
(Kupfermann and Weiss, 1986 ). One problem with the concept of command
neurons is that there are good theoretical reasons (Getting, 1989 ;
Churchland and Sejnowski, 1992 ) as well as growing empirical evidence
that neurons can be involved in more than one behavior, and that their
role in different behaviors may not be invariant (Hooper and Moulins,
1989 ; Lockery and Kristan, 1990 ; Fetz, 1992 ; Meyrand et al., 1994 ; Wu
et al., 1994 ). In the nervous system of vertebrates and many higher
invertebrates, the evidence for multifunctionality of interneurons,
however, is indirect, and the neural circuitry and behavior are so
complex that it is not possible to understand unambiguously how the
activity of the neurons relates to specific behaviors.
Head movement in Aplysia provides a good model system for
exploring issues concerned with the functional role of neurons in
multiple behaviors. Head movements occur in a variety of behaviors
(Leonard and Lukowiak, 1986 ) including defensive withdrawal (Walters,
1986 ; Teyke et al., 1989 ), locomotion and searching (Teyke et al.,
1992 ; Kuenzi and Carew, 1994 ), feeding (Preston and Lee, 1973 ;
Kupfermann, 1974a ; Teyke et al., 1990b ), and reproductive behavior
(Arch and Smock, 1977 ; Susswein et al., 1984 ; Ferguson et al., 1989 ;
Bernheim and Mayeri, 1995 ). Each of these behaviors involves a head
movement component that occurs together with other behavioral
components specific to the particular response. For example, feeding
involves a coordination of relatively nonstereotyped appetitive
behaviors involving head movements and more stereotyped regular
rhythmic consummatory responses, such as biting and swallowing, that
are executed by the buccal mass.
There are at least three distinct variants of head movements in
Aplysia: (1) head extension and retraction (occurring during
locomotion and defensive responses), (2) nondirected head waving
(occurring during free foraging), and (3) directed head turning
(occurring in response to a unilateral food stimulus and to noxious
stimuli, and during reproductive behaviors). Because directed head
turning is a unilateral response to a unilateral stimulus, in the
present study, we attempted to find candidate neurons for head turning
by identifying cells that have asymmetrical inputs and outputs. We
present the findings on one such cell, an interneuron called CC5.
Evidence is provided that CC5 neurons are involved in the control of a
component of two types of movements: a local, tentacle withdrawal, and
a defensive head withdrawal. Both of these responses involve
contractions of muscles of the neck and head and, in addition, include
a shortening response of one or both pedal arteries. Either individual
CC5 cells or the left-right pair of cells may be necessary and
sufficient for the arterial-shortening component of these responses.
During withdrawal responses, CC5 appears to provide the only excitation
of the pedal artery shortener neuron (PAS), a motor neuron that
provides the only source of excitation of the PA (Skelton and Koester,
1992 ). Elsewhere, we provide evidence that CC5 plays various roles in a
number of other behaviors (Xin et al., 1996 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects. These experiments were done on ~200
wild-type Aplysia californica, weighing 250-350 gm
(Marinus, Long Beach, CA). The animals were maintained at 14-16°C in
holding tanks containing aerated, filtered artificial seawater (ASW)
for 3-6 d before being used for experiments.
Preparations. Three types of preparations were used: an
isolated ganglia preparation, a semi-intact (isolated head)
preparation, and a reduced preparation. Before dissection, the animal
was immobilized by an injection of an isotonic magnesium chloride
solution of ~25% of body volume.
The isolated ganglia preparation included all the head ganglia (buccal,
cerebral, pedal, and pleural). In some experiments, as specified, we
also included the abdominal ganglion or pedal arteries. All ganglia,
except the buccal, were pinned dorsal side up to a clear Sylgard
silicone elastomer floor of a recording chamber containing fresh ASW.
The buccal ganglion was pinned rostral surface up. For the preparations
of head ganglia with the pedal arteries attached, the arteries were
carefully dissected bilaterally. Special care was taken to protect the
pair of very fine pedal nerves that innervate the arteries and control
the movement of the arterial longitudinal muscles (Skelton and Koester,
1992 ).
The isolated head preparation consisted of the head ganglia, mouth,
lips, and anterior tentacles with all the associated nerves from the
cerebral ganglia, i.e., upper labial nerve, lower labial nerve, and
anterior tentacle nerve. The cephalic artery, which supplies the mouth,
lip, and anterior tentacle regions of the animal (Skelton and Koester,
1992 ) also was preserved for subsequent perfusion. The preparations
were set in a clear Lucite recording chamber consisting of two
compartments containing ASW. The head ganglia were pinned out in one
compartment in the manner described above for the isolated ganglia
preparation. The mouth, lip, tentacles, and artery were set in the
second compartment, which was deeper than the first chamber, so that
the tissue could be immersed completely in the ASW. The partition
between the two compartments contained fine grooves that allowed the
peripheral nerves to pass through. The grooves then were filled with
Vaseline to maintain a watertight seal between the two compartments.
The cephalic artery was cannulated, and fresh ASW was pumped into the
artery at a rate of about 0.5 ml per minute to perfuse the tissue and
simulate a hydroskeleton. A suction tube for the outflow was set in the
compartment to control the fluid level.
The reduced preparation consisted of the head ganglia and half of the
anterior body wall with the pedal artery (PA) attached (Nagahama et
al., 1993 ), and with lengths of pedal nerves 4, 5, and 7 (P4, P5, P7),
and pleural nerve 1 (PL1). The preparation was set in a chamber
containing two compartments. The head ganglia were pinned in one
compartment, dorsal side up. The body wall was pinned in the second
compartment with the inner layer up so that it was possible to
visualize the foot and neck muscle and the regions where each nerve
terminated. The PA was cannulated to allow the perfusion of fresh ASW,
using the same system described for the semi-intact preparation. The
viability of the muscle was improved greatly by perfusion of the
tissue, permitting the recording of the relatively small contractions
of the neck muscles (Nagahama et al., 1993 ). Each reported result is
based on observations on at least 3 preparations and in many cases,
5-10 preparations.
Stimuli. Mechanical stimuli were provided by the tip of a
heat-sealed glass Pasteur pipette or by series of von Frey hairs. The
von Frey hairs consisted of polyethylene filaments of different
diameters that exerted a range of forces from 0.1 to 1.0 gm. The finest
filament barely dimpled the skin of the animal, whereas the thickest
filament was capable of damaging the skin in some instances. Combined
chemo-mechano stimuli consisted of pieces of moistened dried-seaweed
(Laver, Vega Trading Company, NY) that were applied to the lips or
tentacles with a fine, blunt plastic forceps. The chemical stimulus
consisted of a seaweed extract solution (Susswein et al., 1978 ) that
was applied 1 cm from the animal by means of a 1 ml syringe. The
extract was ejected into the ASW at ~2 ml/min, a rate slow enough to
be unlikely to produce any substantial tactile input, and application
of ASW without extract was used as a control.
Electrophysiology. All in vitro experiments were
performed at room temperature (19-21°C). For the intracellular
recording and stimulation, neurons were impaled with double-barreled
microelectrodes that were made of thin-walled glass (World Precision
Instruments, Sarasota, FL) and contained 2 M
potassium acetate. The electrodes were flow beveled so that their
impedances ranged from 10 to 15 M . In some
experiments, one electrode was filled with 3% 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein
dye (Rao et al., 1986 ) or with 2% Lucifer yellow (Stewart, 1978 ). To
test for monosynapticity of connections, the threshold for action
potential generation was raised by bathing the ganglia in a
high-divalent cation solution. Unless otherwise specified, this
solution contained 30 mM
Ca2+ (3 × normal) and 150 mM Mg2+ (3 × normal).
For the extracellular recording or stimulation, various nerves and
connectives were used including pleural and pedal nerves (PL1, P4, P5,
P7), buccal nerves (B2) (Gardner, 1971 ), cerebral-buccal connective
(C-BC), cerebral-pedal connective (C-PC), cerebral-pleural connective
(C-PLC), and pleural-abdominal connective (PL-AbC). The cut ends of
the nerves or connectives were drawn into small-diameter polyethylene
suction electrodes. Nerve recordings were made with AC amplifiers (A-M
Systems), and electrical stimulation of the nerves was provided by a
Grass 88 stimulator.
For monitoring the contractions of muscles or blood vessels, an
isotonic displacement transducer (Harvard Bioscience) was used. The
transducer was set to record contractions along either transverse or
longitudinal directions of the neck muscles (Nagahama et al., 1993 ) or
was attached to the distal end of the PA (Skelton and Koester, 1992 ) so
that it recorded changes in length of the artery.
Morphology. To determine the size, shape, and destination of
processes of identified neurons, cells were filled with 3%
5(6)-carboxyfluorescein dye. Successful intracellular labeling was
achieved by iontophoretic injection of the dye for 15-60 min, followed
by a 48 hr incubation at 4°C to allow the dye to fill the processes
fully. To reduce active transport of the dye from the cells during
incubation, probenecid (Steinberg et al., 1987 ) was added to the
bathing solution (10 mM final concentration). As
reported previously, the presence of probenecid greatly improved the
dye fills, particularly for small processes far from the cell body
(Rosen et al., 1991 ). After incubation, the living ganglia were cleared
in 50% glycerol in ASW, the fluorescence was visualized with a Leitz
fluorescence microscope, and the labeled cell body with its processes
was photographed. In some preparations, the cells were filled with
Lucifer yellow, fixed in paraformaldehyde, and viewed after dehydration
and clearing. Finally, cells in the cerebral ganglion that project to
the pedal and pleural ganglia were visualized by ``back fills'' of
combinations of pairs of left and right pedal and pleural connectives,
using 1 M nickel chloride for one connective and
and 1 M cobalt chloride for the contralateral
connective. The cerebral ganglion then was developed with a saturated
alcohol/rubeanic acid solution (dithio-oxamide, Sigma, St. Louis),
fixed in formaldehyde, dehydrated, and cleared in methyl salicylate
(Quicke and Brace, 1979 ).
In vivo recording of the pedal artery nerve (PAn) before and
after lesion of the C-PLC. To obtain information about possible
functional roles of CC5, lesion experiments were performed on 15 animals. Animals were immobilized as mentioned above. All instruments
and containers were sterilized by exposing them overnight to UV light.
The surgical incision was started 5 mm lateral to a rhinophore and ran
caudally for 5 mm. The activity of the PAS neuron, which innervates the
PA, was monitored by means of chronic in vivo recordings
from the PAn, which contains the axon of the PAS neuron. The chronic
recording techniques have been described previously (Alevizos et al.,
1991 ; Skelton and Koester, 1992 ). In brief, to stabilize the small
silicone polymer electrode, it was attached to the outside of a short
length (3 mm) of polyethylene tubing. The tube (and attached electrode)
was held in place by anchoring it to a portion of the arterial tree
close to the nerve from which the recording was to be made. To anchor
the tube, the artery was severed, and the flanged tips of the tube were
inserted into the cut ends of the vessels. The vessel was tied around
the ends of the polyethylene tube with silk sutures (Ethicon 6-0),
leaving the electrode exposed between the cut ends of the vessel and
permitting unimpeded blood flow. The intact nerve was placed on the
groove on the electrode and was insulated from the hemocoel by pinning
a latex membrane over the nerve. To record from the right PAn (RPAn),
the tube-mounted electrode was inserted into the adjacent portion of
the rostral anterior aorta. To record from the left PAn (LPAn), the
tube-mounted electrode was inserted into the proximal end of the left
PA. After mounting of the electrode, the incision was closed with silk
sutures (Ethicon 6-0), and the animal was returned to its home cage.
Animals typically recovered from the operation after 1 or 2 d.
Animals were considered to have recovered from surgery when they
responded to a food stimulus by assuming an upright feeding posture and
showing bite responses when food was touched to the perioral zone.
Movements of the animal and activity of the PAS were recorded
simultaneously by using two video cameras, one of which was focused on
the animal and the other focused on the paper of a Brush pen recorder.
The two images were combined (Panasonic, Digital AV Mixer, WJ-AVE5)
before recording on tape. After recording, the animals were subjected
to a second operation to eliminate the direct input of CC5 to the PAS.
This was accomplished by severing the C-PLC on the side from which the
PAS was recorded, because CC5 sends its sole axon to the pedal ganglion
via the ipsilateral C-PLC. Animals then were permitted to recover, and
their behavior and PAS activity were recorded a second time.
RESULTS
As a first approach toward investigating possible neurons involved
in head turning and other aspects of the appetitive phases of feeding,
we attempted to locate cerebral interneurons that project to the
pleural or pedal ganglia. The cerebral ganglion is in a position in
which it can receive afferent information from the lips and tentacles
and exert control over the head, neck, and foot, either directly by
projections to these structures or indirectly by means of cerebral
interneurons that project to neurons in the pedal and pleural ganglia.
Indeed, there is evidence that the cerebral ganglion contains several
feeding-related command-like neurons (Teyke et al., 1990a ; Rosen et
al., 1991 ) and locomotion command-like neurons (Fredman and
Jahan-Parwar, 1983 ). Electrophysiological and anatomical data suggest
that the C-PC or C-PLC contains axons of neurons that project from the
cerebral ganglion to the pedal-pleural ganglia (Jahan-Parwar and
Fredman, 1976 ; Teyke et al., 1989 ), and it is known that bilateral
transection of the C-PC/C-PLC eliminates head-turning responses
(Kupfermann, 1974b ; Xin and Kupfermann, 1995 ).
Our backfills revealed the positions of cell bodies that send axons
into the C-PC or C-PLC (Fig. 1). Backfill of the C-PC
revealed cells positioned throughout the major cell cluster groups
(Jahan-Parwar and Fredman, 1976 ) of the cerebral ganglion (Fig.
1A). In some preparations, one or two filled cells
could be found in the ipsilateral E cluster. Intracellular dye fills of
cells in the E cluster revealed a reproducibly identified cell that
sends its axon into the ipsilateral pedal connective. Backfill of the
C-PL (Fig. 1B) filled cells located primarily in the A, D,
and C clusters, and no cells were found in the E cluster.
Fig. 1.
Schematic diagram of the position of cells in the
cerebral ganglion that send axons to the pedal (A) or
pleural (B) connective. The arrowhead indicates
the filled connective. The boundary of the C cluster is indicated by
the circular outline. The figure summarizes the results
obtained from five preparations. Typically, one connective was filled
with cobalt chloride, and the contralateral connective was filled with
nickel chloride so that cells with crossed and uncrossed axons could be
distinguished by color (Quicke and Brace, 1979 ). Cells located toward
the dorsal surface are shown as solid; cells toward the
ventral surface are shown as open.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
In an initial intracellular survey of cells that send an axon to the
pedal or pleural ganglia, we found that the C cluster (Fig. 1,
circled cells) contains a number of neurons that appear to
have largely unilateral inputs and outputs, making them good candidates
for participation in strongly lateralized responses such as head
turning. A general survey revealed that the C cluster can be divided
approximately into two regions. The lateral region contains neurons of
relatively small size (30-50 µm in 250-300 gm animals), most of
which appear whitish under incident illumination. The medial region
contains larger neurons (70-100 µm), most of which are
yellow-orange. In the medial region, several cells were found to
receive marked asymmetrical inputs from sensory stimulation of the lips
and tentacles, the input being stronger from the ipsilateral side. The
axons of these medial C cluster cells project ipsilaterally either to
the C-PLC or to the C-PC. One such bilateral pair of identifiable
neurons, CC5, was found to evoke very widespread activity in neurons in
other ganglia.
Morphology of CC5
CC5 is located bilaterally in the superficial layer of the caudal
medial part of the cerebral C cluster (Fig. 2). It
typically appeared to be covered by a layer of cells, but could be
revealed by stretching and flattening the ganglion so that the most
superficial layer of cells separated partially. The cell is round and
yellow-orange. Its diameter is ~80 µm. Intracellular dye fills with
Lucifer yellow, and 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein dye revealed that CC5 has a
single stout axon that extends into the ipsilateral C-PLC (Fig. 2).
Fine branches are given off from the main axon in the neuropil deep to
the cells in the A cluster before the axon enters the C-PLC. The main
process projects through the C-PLC to the ipsilateral pleural-pedal
ganglia; the axon then continues through the pedal-pedal commissure to
the contralateral pedal-pleural ganglion where it appears to
terminate. Many fine branches extend from the main process as it
courses through the ipsilateral and contralateral pleural and pedal
ganglia.
Fig. 2.
Schematic drawing illustrating the right CC5
neuron and its processes. A symmetrical cell is present in the opposite
hemi-ganglion. The drawing is based on visualizations of CC5 neurons in
fixed ganglia after fills with Lucifer yellow and on unfixed ganglia
after fills with 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein dye (n = 10).
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
CC5 receives asymmetric inputs from the lips and tentacles
On initial penetration, CC5 fired at a high frequency, and then
over a period of 10 to 15 min, its firing slowed gradually until it
became almost quiescent, exhibiting occasional trains of spontaneous
firing or irregular low-frequency spikes. For most experiments, the
cell was hyperpolarized slightly to eliminate spontaneous firing. The
spike had a relatively rapid rise and fall time and had a half-height
width of 6-8 msec. The resting potential of the cells was
approximately 50 mV, and the spike exhibited an amplitude of ~60
mV. A low rate of spontaneous excitatory synaptic inputs was typically
observed.
To determine the sensory inputs to CC5, the isolated head preparation
was used. Seaweed extract, pieces of seaweed, or mechanical probes were
applied to the lips or tentacles. In experiments designed to explore
the possible contribution of CC5 to head-turning responses, we
initially touched the lips with a piece of seaweed to promote a
food-induced arousal state (Kupfermann, 1974a ), because head turning to
tactile stimuli in intact animals requires that the animal be aroused
(Teyke et al., 1990b ).
Application of a piece of a tactile stimulus to the lip, anterior
tentacle, or rhinophore evoked excitatory responses in CC5 (Fig.
3A,B). Similar responses were
evoked by a piece of seaweed. Chemical stimuli lacking a tactile
component, provided by seaweed extract, did not produce excitatory
effects on CC5. The evoked responses appeared to exhibit little or no
decrement when repeated, in contrast to responses to tactile stimuli,
evoked in cerebral B cells (Fredman and Jahan-Parwar, 1977 ) or in cells
involved in siphon, gill, and tail-withdrawal responses (Kupfermann et
al., 1970 ). Although the response did not decrement with repeated
stimulation, it exhibited rapid adaptation, and prolonged stimuli were
only minimally more effective than brief stimuli. CC5 had a large
receptive field, extending from the perioral zone to the most lateral
anterior tentacle, and included the rhinophore. Within this receptive
field, there was no apparent regional difference in the intensity of
the response. This is in contrast to head-turning responses in intact
animals in which the responses are stronger with more lateral stimuli
(Teyke et al., 1990b ).
Fig. 3.
Sensory inputs from the tentacles to CC5.
A, B, Intracellular recordings from the left and
right CC5 in the same preparation were obtained in isolated head
preparations. A, Contact with a fine von Frey hair applied
to one tentacle (the right tentacle) evoked excitatory synaptic input
and firing of the ipsilateral CC5 and little input in the contralateral
CC5. B, When stronger stimulus was pressed strongly to the
tentacle, there was excitatory input in both the ipsilateral and
contralateral CC5, with the ipsilateral response stronger.
C, D, In the presence of a solution containing
high-divalent cations, synaptic input was seen only in the ipsilateral
cell for both weak (C) and strong (D) stimuli
(n = 8).
[View Larger Version of this Image (13K GIF file)]
Weak tactile stimuli (seaweed or a von Frey hair, 0.1-0.3 gm) could
evoke synaptic input and spike activity that was primarily or
exclusively ipsilateral (Fig. 3A), whereas stronger stimuli
(tip of heat-sealed Pasteur pipette or von Frey hair, 0.5-1.0 gm)
evoked responses in the contralateral as well as ipsilateral CC5 (Fig.
3B). However, the contralateral response was much weaker
than the ipsilateral response.
When the head ganglia were bathed in a high-divalent cation solution,
which suppresses polysynaptic activity, the excitation of CC5 induced
by touch to the ipsilateral lip or tentacles still persisted, whereas
the excitation of CC5 induced by touch to the contralateral lip or
tentacles by either a weak (Fig. 3C) or strong (Fig.
3D) stimulus was eliminated or greatly reduced. This
suggests that the excitation CC5 receives from the ipsilateral field is
mediated at least in part by monosynaptic connections, whereas the
contralateral input may be mediated primarily by interneurons, although
we cannot exclude completely the possibility that the high-divalent
cation solution produced conduction block of the contralateral afferent
rather than block of interneurons.
Synaptic output of CC5 to pedal arterial shortener
motor neurons
To initially study the possible role of CC5 in head turning and
other behaviors, we fired the neuron and recorded from different
nerves. We found that firing of CC5 altered the activity of units
recorded from a variety of nerves. A particularly striking effect was
observed in the PA nerve, in which the activity of a single unit was
excited strongly by firing CC5 (Fig. 4). Firing of CC5
resulted in increased activity of the ipsilateral PA nerve, but had no
effect on the contralateral PA nerve (Fig. 4B).
Fig. 4.
A1, Firing trains of spikes in CC5
excite a neuron with an axon in the ipsilateral PAn but have no effect
on the neuron in the contralateral PAn. A2, When the
ipsilateral PAS neuron was hyperpolarized, CC5 failed to evoke spikes
in the cell, and the extracellularly recorded spike of PAS was
eliminated (n = 6). B, Simultaneous
extracellular recordings from the LPAn and RPAn and intracellular
recordings from the left and right CC5 neurons show the strictly
unilateral actions of CC5 on the PAS (n = 10).
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Previously, Skelton and Koester (Skelton and Koester, 1992 ) reported
that the LPAn and RPAn contain the axon of a motor neuron, called the
pedal artery shortener (or PAS) for which firing causes contraction of
the PA. They demonstrated that each PAS neuron provides the major and
perhaps sole excitation to the ipsilateral PA. We therefore recorded
next from the PAS neuron (located in the pedal ganglion) and found that
this neuron receives a strong excitatory synaptic connection from CC5,
and the EPSP was capable of driving PAS at a relatively high rate (Fig.
4A1). When PAS was hyperpolarized, CC5 no longer
evoked spikes in PAS, and no spike activity appeared in the PAn (Fig.
4A2). Each spike of CC5 produced a constant latency
EPSP in the ipsilateral PAS (Fig. 5A1). Our
evidence suggests that the EPSP is a monosynaptic chemical synaptic
potential. The EPSP was blocked or reduced in a solution containing low
calcium and high magnesium (Fig. 5A2) and persisted in a
high-divalent cation solution (Fig. 5B2).
Fig. 5.
A1, CC5 evokes an EPSP in the
ipsilateral PAS motor neuron. A2, The EPSP appears to be
mediated chemically and is reduced or blocked in a solution containing
increased Mg2+ and decreased
Ca2+. B1, B2, The EPSP
persists when the preparation is bathed in a solution containing
high-divalent cations (n = 6).
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Additional studies indicated that CC5 may provide the only
excitatory input from the cerebral ganglion to PAS via the C-PLC.
Extracellular stimulation of the C-PLC with a brief electrical pulse
evoked an EPSP in PAS. In ASW, pulses of progressively greater
intensity evoked progressively larger EPSPs (Fig.
6A). The EPSPs contained multiple peaks that
occurred at variable latencies, suggesting that the EPSPs were caused,
at least in part, by polysynaptic activity evoked in the pedal or
pleural ganglia. In a high-divalent cation solution that reduces
polysynaptic activity, stimulation of the C-PLC evoked a simple EPSP
that occurred in an all-or-none manner (Fig. 6B). The size
of the EPSP was unchanged when larger pulses were used. With very large
pulses, multiple EPSPs sometimes were evoked, and these appeared to be
caused by multiple firing of a single axon in the connective. We also
found that extracellular stimulation of the C-PC did not evoke an
obvious EPSP in PAS. In fact, stimulating the C-PC evoked inhibitory
inputs to PAS (Fig. 7). The presence of the IPSP does
not exclude the existence of a simultaneous EPSP. Elsewhere, we show
that the inhibitory input comes from, at least in part, an inhibitory
connection of identified cerebral neuron C-PR (Xin et al., 1996 ).
Fig. 6.
Electrical stimulation of the pleural end of a
severed C-PLC evokes an EPSP in PAS. Single shocks of the pleural end
of the C-PLC were presented at gradually increasing intensities
(voltage indicated below traces). A, In normal
ASW, PAS exhibits small spontaneous EPSPs, probably of origin from the
pedal or pleural ganglia. In this experiment, a 5 V shock evoked an
EPSP with multiple components. Higher voltages brought in a larger EPSP
that appeared to be polysynaptic. B, In high-divalent ASW, a
smooth EPSP was evoked in PAS at a relatively sharp threshold, and no
additional increase in size of the EPSP occurred with shocks of
increasing intensity (n = 5).
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
A train of electrical stimuli (line
under trace) applied to the pedal end of a severed C-PC
evokes IPSPs in the PAS motor neuron (n = 5).
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
CC5 is necessary and sufficient for the mediation of the unilateral
PA-shortening component of a local withdrawal reflex
Given that CC5 provides excitatory input to PAS, we examined
whether firing of CC5 was capable of firing PAS sufficiently to evoke
contractions of the PA. We found that firing of CC5 produced an
arterial-shortening response for which the magnitude was proportional
to the rate of firing of CC5, within a range of ~3-15 spikes/sec
(Fig. 8A). This range of firing is
similar to that evoked by brief tactile stimuli applied to the tentacle
(see Figs. 3, 9). The shortening of the PA also was dependent on the
firing frequency of the pedal artery motor neuron PAS (Fig.
8B). The contraction was related linearly to PAS frequency
over a range of 5-15 Hz (Fig. 8C). The shortening produced
by CC5 appeared to be accounted for completely by the evoked firing of
the PAS, because the contraction evoked by CC5 was blocked completely
when the firing of the PAS was prevented by means of hyperpolarizing
current (Fig. 8D).
Fig. 8.
Firing of PAS and CC5 evokes contractions of the
PA. A, Contraction of the PA as a function of different
firing frequencies of CC5. CC5 was fired by means of 1 sec depolarizing
pulses with progressively increasing current. The frequency of the
resulting spikes is indicated below the CC5 traces.
Contraction of the artery was recorded by an isotonic displacement
transducer (n = 7). B, Magnitude of
shortening of the PA as a function of the frequency of firing of PAS
during bursts of 2 sec duration (n = 7). C,
Relationship of spike frequency of CC5 (squares) or PAS
(circles) to the magnitude of shortening of the PA.
D, Evidence that PA shortening evoked by CC5 is mediated
entirely by the ipsilateral PAS neuron. Initially, the left CC5 was
fired by a long depolarizing pulse, and the left PAS was at resting
potential. PAS fired because of the excitation from CC5, and the left
PA contracted. When PAS was hyperpolarized so that CC5 did not evoke
any spikes in PAS (second burst of spikes in CC5), the arterial
contraction was blocked completely. Between the two CC5 stimulations,
PAS was fired by a long depolarizing pulse so that it fired similarly
to that evoked by firing of CC5. Direct firing of PAS evoked a
contraction comparable to that evoked by CC5 (n = 5).
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Role of CC5 in the arterial-shortening component
of a local withdrawal response. A, In a semi-intact
preparation, touches (line under trace) to the tentacle with
a piece of seaweed evoked firing of CC5 and contraction of the
ipsilateral PA. For the last touch in the series, CC5 fired at a
relatively low frequency, and only a small contraction was evoked.
B, Effect of hyperpolarizing CC5 on the arterial contraction
reflex. The tentacle was touched three times
(B1-B3), and CC5 also was stimulated directly
(B4). B1, When CC5 was at rest potential, a
tactile stimulus evoked spikes in CC5, and an arterial contraction
occurred. B2, When CC5 was hyperpolarized, the touch with
seaweed evoked only a single spike in CC5, and there was no contraction
of the artery. B3, Direct firing of CC5 at a rate comparable
to that evoked by the tactile stimulus evoked a comparable contraction
of the artery (n = 6).
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Because a weak tactile stimulus effectively fires only one CC5 neuron,
and one CC5 neuron is capable of evoking a contraction of the PA, we
examined next whether an individual CC5 was necessary for the control
of an arterial-shortening response that might be evoked by a weak
tactile stimulus applied to a tentacle. In preparations consisting of
the head ganglia with the lips, anterior tentacles, and PA attached, we
found that a weak tactile stimulus applied to a tentacle consistently
evoked a local contraction of the tentacle, accompanied by a shortening
of the ipsilateral PA together with firing of CC5 (Fig.
9A,B1,B3)
and excitatory input to PAS (Fig. 10A). The
firing of CC5 was necessary for the arterial-shortening response,
because the arterial contraction (Fig. 9B2) and excitatory
input to PAS (Fig. 10C) evoked by the tactile stimuli was
blocked completely when CC5 was hyperpolarized. CC5 also appeared to be
sufficient to evoke the arterial shortening, because direct firing of
CC5 at a rate approximately comparable to that produced by brief
tactile stimuli produced arterial shortening (Fig. 9B4) and
excitatory input to PAS (Fig. 10B) that was approximately
comparable to that evoked by the tactile stimuli. Even with a
relatively strong tactile stimulus, CC5 appeared to be necessary (Fig.
11C) and sufficient (Fig. 11B)
for the firing of the PAS neuron. In contrast to arterial shortening,
CC5 appeared to be neither necessary nor sufficient for the tentacle
withdrawal component of the local withdrawal response. Visual
observation of the tentacles revealed that firing of CC5 produced
little or no tentacle withdrawal, and a robust tentacle withdrawal
still occurred when CC5 was hyperpolarized.
Fig. 10.
CC5 mediates excitatory input to PAS evoked by
tactile stimulation of a tentacle. The activity of the ipsilateral PAS
recorded intracellularly together with an extracellular recording from
the PAn. A, A weak tactile stimulus applied to the
ipsilateral tentacle evoked excitatory input to CC5, followed by
excitatory input to PAS. B, When CC5 was fired directly by a
depolarizing pulse that was adjusted to evoke firing similar to that
evoked by the tactile stimulus, PAS fired approximately the same as it
did after the tactile stimulus (compare with A).
C, When CC5 was hyperpolarized, the tactile stimulus failed
to evoke spikes in CC5, and the excitatory input to PAS was eliminated
(n = 6).
[View Larger Version of this Image (10K GIF file)]
Fig. 11.
The firing of PAS after relatively strong tactile
stimuli appears to be mediated by CC5. In this experiment, both the
left and right CC5 cells were impaled. A, The two CC5 cells
were slightly hyperpolarized (~5 mV) in order to decrease spontaneous
activity. A relatively strong and prolonged stimulus (indicated by the
bar under the trace) applied to the right tentacle produced
strong excitatory input to the ipsilateral CC5 and firing of the PAS
motor neuron as monitored by its spike recorded extracellularly in the
RPAn. The stimulus evoked a weaker input to the contralateral CC5 that
failed to fire the hyperpolarized cell and consequently did not alter
the activity of the left PA motor neuron recorded in the LPAn.
Termination of the stimulus evoked what appeared to be an off response.
B, Direct firing of the right CC5 in a pattern similar to
that produced by the tactile stimulus also evoked firing of the
ipsilateral PAS neuron monitored in RPAn. C, The increased
firing of PAS after the tactile stimulus was eliminated completely by
hyperpolarizing the CC5s another 15 mV so that their spiking was
largely eliminated (n = 6).
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Data obtained from recordings from the PAn artery nerve in free-moving
animals were consistent with the idea that CC5 may be necessary and
sufficient for the arterial-shortening component of a local withdrawal
response. Weak tactile stimuli applied to a tentacle evoked a brief
discharge in the PA nerve (Fig.
12A). When the C-PLC was severed
and the animal permitted to recover, tactile stimuli applied to the
head no longer affected activity in the PA nerve (Fig.
12B). This lesion eliminates the only direct
connection that CC5 provides to the ipsilateral PAS neuron. Although in
itself this experiment is not definitive, because numerous axons other
than CC5 are present in the connective, the data support the findings
presented in Figures 8 and 9 that indicate that lack of the response to
tactile stimuli was attributable to the disconnection of CC5 to the PAS
neuron.
Fig. 12.
Activity of PAS recorded extracellularly from the
PAn in a free-moving animal. A, A weak touch to the
ipsilateral anterior tentacle by means of a piece of seaweed (similar
results were obtained by a pure tactile stimulus) evoked a brief
relatively high-frequency discharge in the nerve. B, After
sectioning of the C-PLC and recovery from surgery, touch no longer
evoked any responses in the nerve (n = 8).
[View Larger Version of this Image (33K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
The original goal of these experiments was to identify neurons
that might be involved in mediating neck movements and head-turning
behavior. Based on the criteria of receiving asymmetrical inputs and
having asymmetrical outputs, we identified a candidate neuron, CC5,
that is located in the C cluster region of the cerebral ganglion. In
this paper, we report that each CC5 neuron provides a powerful
monosynaptic excitatory input to the ipsilateral PAS neuron, a
bilaterally symmetrical identified motor neuron that controls
contractions of the PA (Skelton and Koester, 1992 ). Shortening of this
artery is a concomitant of behaviors in which the neck of the animal
contracts. The arterial shortening may serve to take up slack in the
artery (Skelton and Koester, 1992 ) or perhaps may provide some motive
force that aids in neck and head movements. The evidence presented in
the present paper suggests that CC5 is involved in a component of the
constellation of responses associated with shortening of the neck. In
the present paper, we have studied the role of CC5 in mediating an
arterial-shortening response that occurs as a component of tentacle and
head-withdrawal responses to tactile stimuli applied to the anterior
tentacles. Two types of behaviors can be distinguished: a local
tentacle withdrawal in response to a weak stimulus, and head
withdrawal, which occurs when a strong or noxious stimulus is applied
(Teyke et al., 1989 ). Both responses involve a concomitant shortening
of the PA. In a companion paper (Xin et al., 1996 ), we present evidence
for a role of CC5 in controlling muscles of the neck that appear to be
involved in head turning, withdrawal, and other behaviors that involve
movements of the head and neck.
The data obtained in this study indicate that the ipsilateral CC5
neuron is necessary and sufficient for the brisk unilateral
arterial-shortening response that is evoked by a relatively weak
ipsilateral tentacular tactile stimulus. This conclusion arises from
converging lines of evidence: (1) The CC5 neurons are excited by
tactile stimuli applied to the head, and weak tactile stimuli only fire
the ipsilateral CC5 neuron at a rate sufficient to drive a contraction.
(2) Each CC5 neuron makes powerful monosynaptic connections to the
ipsilateral PAS motorneuron, and firing of the CC5 cells at rates
comparable to those produced by sensory inputs can evoke arterial
contractions that also are comparable to those evoked by sensory
stimulation. (3) Arterial shortening evoked by weak tactile stimuli is
eliminated completely when the ipsilateral CC5 is removed from the
circuit by hyperpolarization. The results obtained from recordings of
the excitatory follower cell of CC5, PAS, before and after lesioning of
the pleural connective are consistent with the interpretation that
arterial shortening is mediated by CC5. We have not determined the
degree to which CC5 contributes to the other components that make up
the local withdrawal response, but it clearly is not necessary for the
tentacular movements that are evoked by the same stimulus. These
movements can be evoked by firing of cerebral B cells (Fredman and
Jahan-Parwar, 1977 ; Rosen et al., 1979 ), neurons that are not excited
by CC5. Furthermore, small tentacular movements can be elicited by
tactile stimuli even in the absence of the CNS (Y. Xin, K. R. Weiss,
and I. Kupfermann, unpublished observations), presumably mediated by a
peripheral nerve net.
Narrowly construed, CC5 appears to be a rare bona fide example of a
command neuron (Kupfermann and Weiss, 1978 , 1986 ) for the
arterial-shortening component of the total withdrawal reaction. The
notion of defining a command neuron as a cell that is necessary and
sufficient for a specific behavior has been criticized from a number of
points of view [Kupfermann and Weiss, 1978 , 1986 (and references
therein)], but nevertheless the idea that certain neurons can exert
extraordinarily powerful effects on behavior remains attractive, and
several examples of such neurons have been described in both
invertebrates and vertebrates (Nolen and Hoy, 1984 ; Didomenico et al.,
1988 ; Frost and Katz, 1996 ). There are a number of potential problems
encountered specifically by classifying CC5 as a command neuron,
although, operationally, CC5 meets the criteria of necessity and
sufficiency for a particular response. First, it might be argued that
CC5 is odd in that it functions as a command neuron only for weak
stimuli. Any reflex response will have a threshold level at which it is
evoked and at that threshold, any neuron that is part of the circuit
will be necessary for the response (although it need not be
sufficient). Typically, however, the arterial-shortening response
evoked by a weak stimulus or by CC5 firing is well above the noise and
decidedly stronger than the minimal contraction that can be evoked.
Furthermore, despite extensive search, we have not obtained any
evidence that CC5 is one of a group of similar interneurons, any one of
which could reach threshold and produce a small response. A second
potential problem with considering CC5 a command neuron is that the
available evidence indicates that it is necessary and sufficient for
only a component of a larger response, so that the command function of
the neuron could be considered trivial. To some extent, however,
virtually all behaviors can be considered components of larger
behavioral units. It is ultimately a matter of theoretical preference
whether it is useful or illuminating to extend the notion of command to
include cells that elicit components of a more general response. The
Mauthner cell of fish provides an example of an individual identified
vertebrate neuron that appears to control a small but functionally
important component of a complex behavior (Didomenico et al.,
1988 ).
The current work emphasizes the need to categorize command
neurons in terms of specific behaviors that are defined in terms of
movements together with the eliciting stimuli (Kupfermann and Weiss,
1978 ), because the same movement can be elicited by different stimuli,
and slightly different stimuli may elicit markedly different responses.
The neural controls of a specific response very well could be different
for each class of stimuli eliciting the response. Thus, tentacle
movement can be elicited by a weak stimulus as well as by a strong
stimulus. In fact, when a strong tactile stimulus is applied to the
head, instead of a local withdrawal response, a defensive withdrawal of
the whole head is evoked. A strong stimulus activates both CC5 cells,
and even for a strong stimulus, the excitation of a PA is virtually
eliminated by hyperpolarizing the ipsilateral CC5. Thus, it is likely
that acting conjointly, the cells mediate bilateral arterial
shortening, i.e., they act as a two-cell ``command system.'' Head
withdrawal, however, involves inputs to Bn cells (Teyke et al., 1989 )
and probably other neurons that mediate the major contraction movements
of the neck. Our data provide no evidence that the CC5 cells in
themselves can evoke activity in the Bn cells and, in fact, they may
weakly inhibit Bn cells. The CC5 cells, however, may contribute to neck
movements by means of their excitatory connections to motor neurons in
the pedal ganglia (our unpublished observations).
Discussion of what terms to use to describe a neuron may strike some
investigators as a useless exercise of hair splitting. Others may find
that such classification helps organize possibly confusing functional
analyses and adds an intuitive dimension that can supplement more
abstract computational or mathematical accounts of the functional
operation of circuits. An important recent notion related to that of
command neuron, but lacking the behavioral and philosophical
implications of command, is that of the ``influential'' neuron
(Arshavsky et al., 1988 ). Although originally defined as a neuron that
has some effect on a rhythmic motor output (independent of its
functional role), the concept can be extended to include neurons
meeting one of two criteria: (1) the neuron exerts strong effects on
one or more specific neurons, or (2) the neuron has relatively weak
effects, but its effects are widespread, that is, its firing excites or
inhibits large number of neurons. The evidence presented in this paper
indicates that CC5 is an influential neuron in the first sense, because
it appears to provide a major source of excitatory input to a motor
neuron (PAS), which itself provides the major or only source of control
of a particular muscle and behavioral response. In a companion paper
(Xin et al., 1996 ), we provide evidence that CC5 also is an influential
neuron in the second sense, in that firing of CC5 has effects on
numerous other neurons, and it appears to contribute to components of
behaviors during a wide variety of rhythmic as well as nonrhythmic
responses, including withdrawal, locomotion, head turning, head
lifting, and feeding.
FOOTNOTES
Received Feb. 16, 1996; revised April 24, 1996; accepted April 26, 1996.
This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants
MH36730, GM32099, and MH35564. We thank S. C. Rosen for comments on
this paper.
Correspondence should be addressed to Irving Kupfermann, Center for
Neurobiology and Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia
University, 722 West 168th Street, Research Annex, New York, NY
10032.
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August 15, 1996;
16(16):
5266 - 5279.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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