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Previous Article
The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 1998, 18(7):2788-2799
In Vivo Modulation of Interacting Central Pattern
Generators in Lobster Stomatogastric Ganglion: Influence of Feeding and
Partial Pressure of Oxygen
Stefan
Clemens1,
Jean-Charles
Massabuau2,
Alexia
Legeay2,
Pierre
Meyrand1, and
John
Simmers1
1 Laboratoire de Neurobiologie des Réseaux
Université de Bordeaux I and Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, Unité Mixte de Recherche 5816, F-33120 Arcachon,
France, and 2 Laboratoire d'Ecophysiologie et
Ecotoxicologie des Systèmes Aquatiques Université de
Bordeaux I and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
Unité Mixte de Recherche 5805, F-33120 Arcachon, France
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ABSTRACT |
The stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the European lobster
Homarus gammarus contains two rhythm-generating networks
(the gastric and pyloric circuits) that in resting, unfed animals
produce two distinct, yet strongly interacting, motor patterns. By
using simultaneous EMG recordings from the gastric and pyloric muscles
in vivo, we found that after feeding, the gastropyloric
interaction disappears as the two networks express accelerated motor
rhythms. The return to control levels of network activity occurs
progressively over the following 1-2 d and is associated with a
gradual reappearance of the gastropyloric interaction. In parallel with
this change in network activity is an alteration of oxygen levels in
the blood. In resting, unfed animals, arterial partial pressure of
oxygen (PO2) is most often between 1 and 2 kPa
and then doubles within 1 hr after feeding, before returning to control
values some 24 hr later. In vivo, experimental
prevention of the arterial PO2 increase after
feeding leads to a slowing of pyloric rhythmicity toward control values
and a reappearance of the gastropyloric interaction, without apparent
effect on gastric network operation. Using in vitro
preparations of the stomatogastric nervous system and by changing
oxygen levels uniquely at the level of the STG within the range
observed in the intact animal, we were able to mimic most of the
effects observed in vivo. Our data indicate that the
gastropyloric interaction appears only during a "free run" mode of
foregut activity and that the coordinated operation of multiple neural
networks may be modulated by local changes in oxygenation.
Key words:
lobster; feeding behavior; stomatogastric ganglion; neural network; synaptic interaction; oxygen; hypoxia; modulation; internetwork coordination
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INTRODUCTION |
Apart from the question of how
neural networks are constructed intrinsically in terms of synaptic
wiring and cellular membrane properties, a large amount of work has
been devoted to understanding the functional capabilities of networks
under extrinsic neuromodulatory instruction (Steriade et al., 1993 ;
Grillner et al., 1995 ; Marder and Calabrese, 1996 ). Neuromodulatory
transmitters and hormones are able to alter membrane properties and
synaptic efficacy of neurons in a functional network, thereby reshaping
its pattern of activity (Harris-Warrick et al., 1992 ; McCormick and
Bal, 1994 ; Katz, 1995 ; Katz and Frost, 1995a ,b ). However, although
neuromodulatory processes are now relatively well understood, even at
the single cell level (Kaczmarek and Levitan, 1987 ), their precise
physiological relevance in situ to the generation of
behavior is still largely unknown.
In this respect, a useful model is the crustacean stomatogastric
nervous system (STNS), which drives rhythmic activity of the muscles
producing foregut movements. This system includes several spontaneously
active networks that can be studied both in vitro
(Selverston and Moulins, 1987 ; Harris-Warrick et al., 1992 ) and
in vivo (Rezer and Moulins, 1983 , 1992 ; Heinzel et al., 1993 ). The best studied of these are the gastric and pyloric neural circuits located in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) that generate masticatory movements of the gastric mill and filtering contractions of
the pyloric chamber. Substantial data have demonstrated an ability of
these networks to express a wide range of operational variants in
vitro, and a number of modulatory neurotransmitters and hormones
influencing these circuits have been identified (for review, see
Selverston and Moulins, 1987 ; Harris-Warrick et al., 1992 ). Moreover, a
recent in vitro study has suggested that local partial
pressure of oxygen (PO2) at the STG
level can also influence pyloric activity in a neuromodulatory-like
manner (Massabuau and Meyrand, 1996 ). Specifically, changes in oxygen
levels were proposed to exert a regulatory effect on pyloric network
function by modulating cycle frequency and phase relationships via a
specific action on a single neuron of the circuit.
Recently, Clemens et al. (1996 , 1998 ) reported that in vivo
the STG networks of the European lobster Homarus gammarus
are almost continuously active in the resting and unfed animal and that
they express a strict coordinating interaction via specific neurons of
each network. Thus, the first aim of the present study was to examine
the changes in pyloric and gastric network behavior and their
interaction in vivo when working conjointly after feeding activity. In a second step, we wished to assess whether circulating oxygen contributed to the expression of feeding-related changes, in a
manner commensurate with a direct modulatory role. Our data demonstrate
that feeding causes long-lasting modulation of pyloric and gastric
network activity and that the evolution of arterial PO2 follows a similar time course. Moreover, we
show that the pyloric network frequency and the efficacy of the
cross-circuit interaction can be manipulated experimentally both
in vivo and in vitro by different physiological
levels of PO2. Our results suggest that oxygen
can modulate the expression of oscillating neural networks and their
interconnecting synaptic pathways.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
The study was performed on adult European rock lobsters,
H. gammarus, (400-600 gm) of either sex and in the
intermolt stage (stage C3 and D1) (Aiken, 1973 ), purchased from local
commercial suppliers (Aiguillon-Marée, Arcachon, France). Before
the experiments, animals were maintained for at least 1 week in
500 l tanks of running, aerated (i.e., normoxic) seawater
(salinity 29-32%). During maintenance and experimental periods, the
temperature was kept at 16 ± 1°C. Three types of experiment
were performed: in vivo electromyographic (EMG) recordings
before and after feeding in normoxic and hypoxic waters, in
vivo arterial PO2 measurements before and
after feeding in normoxic and hypoxic waters, and in vitro
extracellular recordings in salines equilibrated at various low and
physiological levels of oxygenation.
Electromyographic recording before and after feeding in normoxic
and hypoxic waters. The EMG recording methods are as described previously in detail (Clemens et al., 1998 ). Briefly, animals were
immobilized with the dorsal carapace above the water line, and
Teflon-insulated silver wire electrodes (core diameter of 125 µm; A-M
Systems Inc.) were implanted in the appropriate muscles from the dorsal
aspect of the cephalothorax, near the midline. They were connected to
highly flexible wires (diameter, 1 mm) and fixed to the carapace with
dental cement (Durelon, ESPE). After electrode implantations, animals
were kept under dim light conditions in isolated 50 l tanks
equipped with a "natural" environment in which they could move
freely, dig, and hide. They could not see the experimenter. The free
ends of the electrodes were connected to amplifiers (GRASS P5
AC-preamplifier), and data were displayed on a Tektronix 5113 oscilloscope, stored on a Schlumberger tape recorder (ENERTEC S.A.),
and simultaneously recorded on a Gould TA 11 electrostatic chart
recorder.
Experiments consisted of feeding the lobsters (previously unfed for
3-7 d) with pieces (~5-10 gm) of intermolt crab and recording the
motor expression of the gastric and pyloric networks before and after
food intake in normoxic, air-equilibrated waters
(PO2 = 21 kPa, corresponding to an
O2 fraction (Fo2) of 21%) and hypoxic waters (PO2 = 4 kPa; Fo2 = 4%),
respectively. EMG electrodes were implanted during the 3-7 d unfed
interval, and animals were left to recover for at least 1-2 d before
recordings started. In the series of experiments under hypoxic
conditions, a calibrated electrode of an oxygen meter (YSI Model 57, Yellow Spring Instruments) was placed in the tank and water
PO2 was monitored continuously. Animals (n = 5) were fed 4-6 hr later
(t0). Then at t0 + 1 hr, a transient hypoxic exposure was imposed that lasted 2-3 hr.
Electromyographic recordings were made throughout, along with a monitor
of changes in water PO2. Within 60-80 min, the
inspired PO2 in the water decreased to 4 kPa, a
value at which oxidative metabolism of the lobster is not yet impaired
(McMahon and Wilkens, 1975 ). Recovery toward control conditions was
obtained within 45 min by bubbling air. After experiments, animals were
anesthetized on ice, and the electrodes were connected in turn to an
AC-current source that injected 500 mA for 0.5 sec to tag the recorded
muscle with a black spot. This procedure allowed muscle identification
during subsequent autopsy.
Arterial PO2 measurements before and
after feeding. Analyses were performed on 17 lobsters of either
sex that were kept in 35 l tanks with running seawater renewed at a
rate of 0.5 l/min. The conditions in the tanks were as follows:
inspired PO2 = 20-21 kPa; inspired
PCO2 = 0.1 kPa, pH 7.8-7.9, depending on the
titration alkalinity, which was 1.8-2.0 mEq/l. Hypoxic water was
obtained by bubbling a N2/air gas mixture via mass
flow controllers (model FC-260, Tylan General) driven by a
laboratory-constructed programmable control unit. For arterial blood
sampling by heart puncture, animals were prepared 2-3 d before the
experiments. A hole was drilled through the carapace above the heart.
The underlying epidermis was left intact, and a small piece of rubber
was glued over the hole to prevent blood loss. The experiments were
performed in two series. The first one, under normoxic conditions at
water PO2 = 20-21 kPa, consisted of (1)
sampling an animal after a period of 7 d without feeding; (2)
feeding the animal the following day (t0)
with a halved crab (~5-10 gm, without claws and legs); and (3)
repeating blood sampling from the same individual at t = t0 + 2, + 5, and + 30 hr. In the second
series, blood sampling at t0 + 2 hr was
performed in water maintained hypoxic (inspired PO2 = 4 kPa) from t0 + 1 to + 3 hr. At each sampling, arterial blood was obtained in <20 sec by
gently removing an individual from the water and puncturing its heart
via the rubber membrane with a capillary glass tube attached to a
syringe needle. With this technique, the blood sample (a volume of 100 µl) is driven into the glass tube by the beating heart. Arterial
PO2 was determined within 3 min of sampling
with an E5046 Radiometer polarographic electrode with thermostat set at
seawater temperature. As critically assessed in Forgue et al. (1992)
and Massabuau and Forgue (1996) , this sampling technique, developed in
both laboratory and field conditions, is considered to provide true
in vivo blood PO2 values in
crustaceans.
In vitro extracellular recordings in salines equilibrated at
different physiological levels of oxygenation. Experiments were performed on 14 preparations. The stomatogastric nervous system (STNS)
was dissected according to Selverston and Moulins (1987) . For this the
anterior paired commissural ganglia (CoG), the esophageal ganglion, and
their interconnecting nerves were left attached to the stomatogastric
ganglion (see Fig. 1A), and the isolated system was
placed in an experimental set-up described previously by Massabuau and
Meyrand (1996) . In short, the STG, commissural ganglion, and
commissural connectives were desheathed, and the preparation was pinned
down in a Sylgard-lined petri dish. The entire preparation was
superfused with air-equilibrated saline, except the STG, which was
pinned onto a separate Sylgard plate (10 × 6 × 2 mm) and
enclosed in a 300 µl glass chamber (internal size, 10 × 6 × 5 mm) used as an artificial artery to allow for separate superfusion
at different physiological PO2 (see Fig. 1A). The chamber was gravity-fed with saline at a
constant flow (3-4 ml/min), and the thermostat was set at 15 ± 0.2°C for the entire preparation by means of a laboratory-constructed
thermoelectric device. Extracellular nerve recordings were made with
monopolar platinum electrodes insulated from the bath with Vaseline and connected to laboratory-constructed extracellular amplifiers. Data were
displayed on a Tektronix 5113 oscilloscope, recorded on a Gould ES 1000 electrostatic chart recorder, and stored on videotape coupled to a
Neurocorder DR 890.
The physiological saline used for the superfusion was composed of (in
mM): NaCl 479 , KCl 13.2, CaCl2 13.7, MgSO4 10, Na2SO4 3.9, HEPES 5. The
pH was adjusted to 7.45 with HCl. The low PO2 gas mixtures were obtained by mixing
N2/O2/CO2 as
described above and in Massabuau and Meyrand (1996) . During
experiments, PO2 was varied in the range of
1-5 kPa, and the CO2 partial pressure was maintained at
0.4 kPa, a typical value in blood of water-breathers (Rahn, 1966 ).
Between experiments, the gas phase composition was analyzed using a
paramagnetic O2 analyzer (Servomex 1100A) and an infrared
CO2 analyzer (Servomex 1410B) calibrated with high grade
N2 and precision gas mixtures (Fo2 = 3.99 ± 0.04%; Fco2 = 1.01 ± 0.01%). The O2
concentration (Co2) in the saline was calculated
according to Henry's law (Co2 = o2 · PO2) with o2 = 12.4 µmol/l · kPa at 14°C.
Data analysis. After the experiments, data were digitized
with a CED 1401 plus-interface (CED, Cambridge, England) and stored on
an IBM-PC equipped with an external magneto-optical disk. Quantitative analyses of extracellular recordings were used to describe and compare
the activity patterns, including cycle period and burst duration, of
the stomatogastric muscles under the different experimental conditions.
Data analysis was performed by using the Spike2-program package (CED)
and adjusting the algorithms submitted to the experimental conditions.
In a subsequent analysis, SigmaPlot and SigmaStat (Jandel Scientific,
San Rafael, CA) were used for mathematical calculations and comparisons
of data. Data are reported as mean ± SE except where stated
otherwise. Differences were evaluated using paired t test or
nonparametric Mann-Whitney and Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, and
p < 0.05 was set as the limit of significant
difference between samples.
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RESULTS |
Performance and interactions of the gastric and pyloric networks in
unfed animals
Under resting conditions in vivo (animals unfed), the
pyloric and gastric networks (consisting of 12 and 16 neurons,
respectively) are almost continuously active and coordinated via a
direct inhibitory synapse (Fig.
1B) (Clemens et al.,
1998 ). It is important to note that because the motor neurons
themselves form the central pattern generators responsible for the
gastric and pyloric rhythms, electromyographic recordings provide a
direct image of ongoing central network activity within the STG. The
pyloric network, represented in Figure 1C by recordings from
the constrictor muscles c1 and c2, which are driven by the single
lateral pyloric (LP) motor neuron and eight pyloric (PY) motor neurons,
respectively, expresses a continuous activity with a mean cycle period
of 2.5 ± 0.2 sec (n = 25) and mean burst
durations of 0.9 ± 0.1 sec (LP) and 1.0 ± 0.2 sec (PY). The
gastric mill, as monitored in Figure 1C from the power
stroke muscles of the lateral teeth [innervated by the unique medial gastric (MG) neuron] and the medial tooth [innervated by the gastric mill (GM) neurons], as well as from the return stroke muscle of the
lateral teeth [innervated by the two lateral posterior gastric (LPG)
neurons], is also rhythmically active, with mean cycle periods of
20-40 sec, depending on the animal. After onset of each burst in the
gastric MG neuron, the following pyloric period is prolonged considerably (Fig. 1C, PY trace). This
prolongation is attributable to a direct inhibitory effect of the
medial gastric/lateral gastric (MG/LG) neurons onto the pyloric
pacemaker neurons [pyloric dilator/anterior burster (PD/AB)] (Fig.
1B), which in turn allows the PY neurons to continue
firing for longer in the next pyloric cycle (Fig. 1C)
(Clemens et al., 1998 ). These coordinated patterns of activity are very
stable and show virtually no change for weeks if the animal remains
unfed.

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Figure 1.
Stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) of the
European lobster H. gammarus. A, The
dissected STNS in vitro. The stomatogastric ganglion
(STG) receives descending input from the brain and other STNS ganglia via the single stomatogastric nerve (stn).
For in vitro experiments, the STG was placed in an
artificial glass artery to permit oxygenation changes at the level of
the ganglion only. B, Synaptic wiring diagram of the
pyloric and gastric networks. The pyloric network consists of 11 motor
neurons and 1 interneuron (AB), and the gastric circuit
is composed of 15 motor neurons and 1 interneuron (Int
1). An inhibitory synapse between the gastric neurons
MG/LG and the pyloric pacemaker group
PD/AB mediates an internetwork
connection. Stick and ball symbols denote chemical inhibitory synapses, resistor symbols represent
electrical connections, and diode indicates rectifying
electrical coupling. C, Spontaneous activity of pyloric
and gastric circuits in vivo. Simultaneous recording of
the pyloric muscles innervated by LP neuron and PY neurons
(pyloric rhythm) and of three gastric muscles
innervated by MG neurons, GM neurons, and LPG neurons, respectively
(gastric rhythm). Note that after the onset of
each MG neuron burst the following PY neuron burst is substantially
prolonged, which is caused by the inhibitory interaction between the
gastric and pyloric networks. CoG, Commissural ganglion;
OG, esophageal ganglion; lvn,
lateroventricular nerve; mvn, medioventricular nerve;
PD, pyloric dilator; AB, anterior
burster; LP, lateral pyloric constrictor; PY, pyloric constrictor; Int 1,
interneuron 1; LPG, lateral posterior gastric;
MG, medial gastric; LG, lateral gastric;
GM, gastric mill; DG; dorsal
gastric.
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Influence of feeding on the expression of the gastric and
pyloric networks
To observe the stomatogastric networks under feeding-related
working conditions, animals were fed (see Materials and Methods), and
the corresponding changes in the network activities were followed during the ensuing days. Figure
2A illustrates one such
experiment. Before feeding (Fig. 2A1),
both networks were active at their different inherent frequencies and
expressed an intercircuit interaction as described above. Thus gastric
MG neuron firing is associated with a longer pyloric PY neuron burst
(see arrows). After feeding (Fig.
2A2), both networks expressed strongly
accelerated activity patterns; pyloric periods dropped from a mean
value at rest of 2.5 sec to ~1.4 sec, and gastric periods decreased
from 40 sec to ~15 sec. Importantly, moreover, the interaction
between the two networks disappeared completely. This change in network
activity is sudden and is closely associated with a preceding food
uptake. We did not observe any particular transition pattern during the actual expression of ingestion behavior (not shown).

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Figure 2.
Effects of feeding on motor expression of the STG
networks. A1, EMG recordings from pyloric
(innervated by PY neurons) and gastric muscles (innervated by MG and GM
neurons) before feeding. Pyloric and gastric networks oscillate at
periods of 2.5 sec and 30-40 sec, respectively. Note PY neuron burst
prolongation after onset of each MG neuron burst
(arrows). A2, EMG recordings from the same animal after feeding. Both networks oscillate at higher frequencies, and the gastropyloric interaction is no longer evident. Note that the fraction of each gastric cycle during which MG and GM
neurons are active is increased considerably. B, Pooled
data showing the effects of feeding on pyloric (top) and
gastric (bottom) network activity. Each point is the
mean period ± SE of 5 min samples. Significant differences in
motor expression persist for at least 24 hr after ingestion.
**p < 0.01; *p < 0.05;
Mann-Whitney test. C, Repetitive feeding
(arrows) elicits reproducible accelerations of pyloric
activity in a single animal during a 4 week recording period. Each
feeding stimulus accelerates pyloric activity by ~50%, albeit with
varying recovery slopes.
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These dramatic changes in the activities of gastric and pyloric
networks are not only restricted to periods of actual feeding behavior.
As is shown in Figure 2B, the motor patterns of
pyloric and gastric networks after feeding recover progressively and in parallel, with significant differences in cycle period between control
and test samples after feeding that last for 24-48 hr. However, the
slope of this recovery and the resting values obtained may differ
considerably from animal to animal and within single individuals. This
variability is seen in Figure 2C, where a single animal was
monitored during the course of three feeding sessions over a period of
4 weeks. Each feeding elicited a sudden acceleration of pyloric
activity that returned toward control values between 2 and 4 d
afterward. Note also that the fraction of the gastric cycle during
which MG and GM neurons are active is considerably increased after
feeding (compare Fig. 2A1 and
2A2), whereas the corresponding duty
cycle for the LPG neurons decreases (see below).
Significantly, the gastropyloric interaction that disappeared
with the expression of the feeding motor patterns also reappears with
the gradual slowing of the pyloric and gastric rhythms. Figure 3A illustrates a typical
experiment in which changes of LP and PY neuron burst duration after
feeding, as well as the pyloric period, are plotted. LP neuron bursts
decreased from 0.8 ± 0.1 sec to 0.3 ± 0.1 sec, whereas PY
neuron bursts decreased from 0.9 sec ± 0.3 sec to 0.5 ± 0.1 sec (n = 19).

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Figure 3.
Evolution of pyloric activity and gastropyloric
interaction after feeding. A, Typical time courses of
mean pyloric periods and LP and PY neuron burst duration after feeding.
All three parameters are reduced abruptly and then recover gradually
over the ensuing 2 d. B, Cycle-by-cycle analysis of
EMG samples in the same experiment before feeding
(B1), 15 min after feeding
(B2), and 2 d after feeding
(B3). B1, Before feeding,
pyloric periods (black triangles) are transiently
prolonged after the onset of each recorded GM neuron burst (see
bar). This is associated with a considerable prolongation of PY neuron (square symbol) burst
duration only. B2, Fifteen minutes after
feeding, both networks oscillate at higher frequencies, LP neuron
(open circle) and PY neuron burst durations decrease,
and the pyloric perturbation has completely vanished.
B3, Two days after feeding, the rhythmic
gastropyloric interaction reappears as the activity of the two networks
returns toward control values.
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The three panels in Figure 3B show a cycle-by-cycle analysis
of the gastric and pyloric activity in the same animal just before feeding (Fig. 3B1) and 15 min
(3B2) and 2 d after feeding
(3B3). Before feeding (Fig.
3B1), the gastric and pyloric networks are active and express a strong interaction. As seen previously, each onset
of a gastric timed burst is accompanied by a transient perturbation of
the pyloric network that manifests itself by a prolonged PY neuron
burst, but with no LP neuron burst alteration. Fifteen minutes after
feeding (Fig. 3B2), both networks operate at
considerably higher frequencies and no longer express any temporal
interaction. Thus the gastric and pyloric networks have become
decoupled and oscillate completely independently. It is not until
12-24 hr after feeding that the gastropyloric interaction starts to
reappear, and it takes an additional 1-2 d (Fig.
3B3) to return to control status.
The distribution patterns of gastric and pyloric periods before
and after feeding are shown in Figure 4.
Before feeding, both networks operate over a wide range of periods,
with gastric periods lasting from 20 to 100 sec (Fig.
4A1), and pyloric periods from 1.6 to 5 sec (Fig. 4B1). As already explained in
Clemens et al. (1998) , gastric periods >100 sec were considered to be
pauses in gastric network activity. Gastric activity expresses a
unimodal distribution, with the most frequently occurring periods in
the range of 20-40 sec. In contrast, the pyloric circuit expresses a
bimodal pattern with two distinct modes of activity. These two modes
correspond to the pyloric cycles occurring between cycles involving the
gastric interaction (mode at 2.2-2.8 sec) and those influenced by the
gastropyloric interaction (mode at 3.8-4.6 sec) (Clemens et al.,
1998 ). After feeding, both the gastric and the pyloric distributions
shift to lower mean period lengths, with gastric periods varying from
10 to 20 sec with no pauses (Fig. 4A2),
whereas pyloric periods now mostly range from 1.2-1.8 sec (Fig.
4B2). Moreover, the typical bimodal
distribution pattern of the pyloric period that is associated with the
gastropyloric interaction before feeding disappears after feeding, and
consequently pyloric period now displays a unimodal distribution.

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Figure 4.
Distribution histograms of gastric and pyloric
periods before and after feeding. A, Gastric network.
A1, Before feeding, gastric periods are widely
varied, mostly occurring between 20 and 40 sec. Note that periods >100
sec were considered as pauses. A2, After
feeding, gastric periods decreased to 10-20 sec without pauses.
B, Pyloric circuit. B1, Before
feeding, pyloric periods display a bimodal distribution at 2.4-2.8 sec
and at 3.8-4.4 sec. The latter mode corresponds to the rhythmic
perturbations by gastric activity. B2, After
feeding, the second mode disappears with pyloric periods now occurring
mostly between 1.4 and 1.8 sec.
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Feeding-related changes in stomatogastric network expression are
accompanied by changes in arterial Po2
Because low arterial PO2 appears to be a
limiting factor in the expression of rapid pyloric rhythmicity in
vitro and oxygen was proposed to play a neuromodulator-like role
in the function of the stomatogastric system (Massabuau and Meyrand,
1996 ), we wished to assess whether changes in arterial
PO2 are involved in the changes in network
activity seen after feeding behavior. In a first step therefore, we
measured arterial blood PO2 changes of animals
during the time course of pre- and postprandial behavior. Figure
5 shows measurements of arterial
PO2 (filled squares, solid line) in parallel with the time course of the pyloric cycle period after feeding (open circles, dashed line), as already
presented in Figure 2B. Interestingly, the reduction
in pyloric period after feeding is a mirror image of the increase in
mean arterial PO2. Consistent with the
conclusions of Massabuau and Meyrand (1996) , this parallel evolution
was the first indication that oxygen changes might play an active role
in shaping motor expression after feeding and that preprandial low
arterial PO2 indeed limits the expression of
fast pyloric rhythmicity in vivo.

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Figure 5.
Time course of mean arterial
PO2 after feeding (filled
squares, solid line). For comparison, the postprandial time
course of pyloric period after feeding, as shown in Figure
2B, is also plotted (open circles, dashed
line). After feeding, as pyloric period decreases, arterial
PO2 increases significantly and then both
parameters return gradually toward control values.
**p < 0.01; *p < 0.05;
Mann-Whitney test.
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Prevention of postprandial PO2 augmentation
restores prefeeding pyloric pattern
In a next step toward determining whether the observed changes in
pyloric frequency after feeding were causally linked to the
augmentation of oxygen partial pressure in the blood, we examined the
effects of a temporary hypoxia in vivo by transiently
suppressing the increase in arterial PO2 after
feeding. Histograms in Figure 6 represent
measurements of arterial PO2 in 17 animals
before feeding (Fig. 6A) and after feeding under
normoxic (Fig. 6B1, B3) and transiently hypoxic (Fig.
6B2) experimental conditions. The
in vivo EMG recordings illustrate the typical motor
expression of pyloric and gastric networks in a single animal under
each of these conditions. Figure 6A shows that before
feeding, the arterial PO2 of unfed and
acclimated animals lies within the range of 1-6 kPa, with most
frequently measured values between 1 and 2 kPa. Under these conditions
of blood oxygenation, the pyloric and gastric networks perform
continuously, albeit relatively slowly (right panel).
Moreover, the pyloric PY neurons express a gastric MG neuron-timed
(underlined) prolongation in each cycle (see
arrows). After feeding (Fig.
6B1, control), arterial
PO2 displays a mode at 2-4 kPa and no value
beneath 2 kPa. At the same time, the pyloric and gastric networks
oscillate more rapidly, and their functional interaction disappears.
Note that the recordings in Figure 6B1 once again highlight the typical effects of feeding on the motor output
of pyloric and gastric networks: (1) acceleration of pyloric and
gastric cycling, (2) loss of the interaction between the two networks,
and (3) an increase in the duty cycle of the MG neuron and a
corresponding decrease for LPG.

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Figure 6.
Transient hypoxia partially reverses postprandial
changes in vivo. A, Distribution
histogram of arterial PO2 in resting unfed animals and corresponding pyloric and gastric motor patterns. PO2 lies mostly in the range of 1-2 kPa.
Characteristically, cycle periods are long, and each gastric MG neuron
burst (underlined) is associated with a pyloric
network perturbation (arrows). pyl pyloric cycle period. B, Effects of imposed lowered
arterial PO2 after feeding.
B1, Under control conditions, after
feeding, the normoxic arterial PO2 increases
along with the rate of pyloric and gastric cycling, and the
internetwork interaction disappears. B2,
Transient suppression of postprandial PO2
increase (by lowering water PO2)
reverses pyloric (but not gastric) acceleration, and the internetwork
interaction is restored (arrows).
B3, These effects are reversible.
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Experimental lowering of arterial PO2 in fed
animals down to prefeeding modal levels 1-3 hr after feeding (see
Materials and Methods) has two effects on the stomatogastric motor
pattern (Fig. 6B2). First, pyloric cycle
periods become longer (here 1.7 sec instead of 1.2 sec), and second,
this manipulation reestablishes the gastropyloric interaction seen
before feeding (arrows in right panel).
Significantly, moreover, gastric mill activity did not appear to be
affected by the transient hypoxia in that no change in gastric rhythm
frequency or phase relationship between the different muscles was
observed. The effects of this manipulation, which were completely
reversible (Fig. 6B3), were seen in all such EMG experiments performed (n = 5). Thus, forcing
postprandial animals into a temporary hypoxia restores several, but not
all, features of pyloric and gastric network activity seen before
feeding. This indicates that changes in oxygen levels within the
physiological range indeed are able to specifically influence motor
network expression in vivo.
To further assess whether the observed O2-induced
changes in the gastropyloric interaction were linked directly to
changes in local partial pressure of oxygen directed at the neural
networks themselves, we examined the effects of similar changes in
oxygen level on these networks in vitro. Figure
7 shows one such experiment (n = 14) in which the stomatogastric ganglion only, and
hence solely the pyloric and gastric networks, was exposed to changes in oxygenation of the bathing saline. In these experiments, the rostral
centers of the STNS (CoG; esophageal ganglion, OG) (compare Fig.
1A) were maintained under standard saline
equilibrated at PO2 = 20 kPa (see Materials and
Methods). Moreover, to distinguish PO2 effects
on pyloric frequency from those on the gastropyloric interaction, we
chose to work in the 2.5-5.0 kPa range of PO2 values, at which no significant effect on pyloric cycle frequency has
been reported (Massabuau and Meyrand, 1996 ).

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Figure 7.
Selective action of PO2 on
gastropyloric interaction in vitro. A,
During superfusion of the STG alone with equilibrated saline at
PO2 = 2.5 kPa, the spontaneously active gastric
and pyloric networks express an interaction (arrows)
similar to that seen in resting and unfed animals. Each onset of a
gastric MG neuron burst (solid line above lvn trace) is
followed by a single perturbation in the pyloric network cycle.
B, Superfusing the STG with saline oxygenated at 5 kPa
leads to a disappearance of the internetwork interaction, without
affecting pyloric or gastric cycle frequency in this
PO2 range. C, This specific
action is reversed on return to control conditions.
pyl, Pyloric cycle period.
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When the STG in vitro is superfused with saline equilibrated
at 2.5 kPa, the gastropyloric interaction is still evident in the
spontaneous activity patterns of the two networks. This coupling is
again characterized by a prolongation of a single PY burst (Fig. 7,
arrows) after the onset of each gastric MG neuron burst (Fig. 7A). In contrast, when PO2 is
increased to 5 kPa, a value representing the situation in the animal
after feeding, this functional interaction disappears (Fig.
7B), although both pyloric and gastric cycle periods remain
unchanged. This local effect of oxygen, which is completely reversible
(Fig. 7C), demonstrates therefore that oxygen directly
influences the expression of the gastropyloric relationship at the STG
level itself.
It is also noteworthy that in these in vitro experiments, as
in vivo, both gastric period length and phase relationships
between the gastric muscles evidently were not affected by the
PO2 changes. Indeed, as illustrated in Figure
8, which shows data from four experiments, the spontaneously oscillating pyloric and gastric networks
react differently to low levels of oxygen. At
PO2 of 1-3 kPa, corresponding to values
observed in prefeeding animals, pyloric cycle frequency lies between
0.5 and 0.8 Hz (period of 2.0-1.25 sec), whereas at
PO2 of 3-20 kPa the frequency ranges from 0.8 to 1.0 Hz (period 1.25-1.0 sec). In contrast, over this same
PO2 range, no significant difference in the
rate (0.15 Hz, period ~7 sec) of gastric cycling is observed.

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Figure 8.
Differential effects of
PO2 on pyloric and gastric networks in
vitro. Pyloric activity is considerably influenced by different oxygenation levels only in the physiological range of 1-3 kPa. By
contrast, gastric cycling remains unaffected (n = 4 preparations).
|
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This indicates that PO2 differentially
influences stomatogastric network activity, in that compared with the
pyloric network, gastric rhythmogenesis appears to be relatively
insensitive to different states of local oxygenation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study we present evidence that (1) a feeding stimulus
conjointly modulates the gastric and pyloric motor patterns of the
stomatogastric nervous system, (2) this long-lasting modulation involves a parallel acceleration of both networks and a loss of a
coordinating interaction between them, and (3) these feeding-related changes occur concomitantly with an increase in arterial partial pressure of oxygen. Importantly, experimental manipulation of oxygen
bathing the stomatogastric ganglion in vivo can reverse the
postprandial increase in pyloric cycle frequency as well as the
expression of the gastropyloric interaction. Moreover, both of these
PO2-dependent changes can be reproduced
in vitro. Consequently, we propose that in lobster, changes
in physiological levels of arterial PO2,
acting specifically at the level of the stomatogastric ganglion,
contribute to the multiple network modulation necessary for
feeding-related behavior.
Feeding causes long-lasting enhancement of pyloric and gastric
network performance
Although several studies have reported the effects of feeding
behavior on the motor expression of crustacean pyloric (Rezer and
Moulins, 1983 , 1992 ) and gastric networks (Fleischer, 1981 ; Turrigiano
and Selverston, 1990 ) separately, the present work is the first report
on the conjoint long-term modulation of pyloric and gastric activity
after feeding (Figs. 2A, 3, 4). Our finding that
feeding accelerates both pyloric and gastric network activity in
H. gammarus for 24-48 hr (Fig. 2B,C) is
consistent with previous data from Panulirus interruptus
(Fleischer, 1981 ; Turrigiano and Selverston, 1990 ) and Jasus
lalandii (Hill, 1976 ) (S. Mayfield, personal communication),
although Barker and Gibson (1977) reported that in H. gammarus the complete digestive cycle in terms of hepatopancreatic activity does not last beyond 12 hr.
Several studies have reported that in crustaceans, several peaks of
postprandial digestive activity may be observed, with a main peak
occurring in the first 3-5 hr after feeding (Vonk, 1960 ; Barker and
Gibson, 1977 ). In this context it is interesting that Turrigiano and
Selverston (1989 , 1990 ) have shown that the acceleration of gastric
network activity after food intake is causally related to a
short-lasting (<3 hr) peak of a cholecystokinin (CCK)-like hormone in
the hemolymph of P. interruptus. That the release of this
peptide hormone is raised only transiently after feeding indicates that
multiple modulatory processes with different time courses of action are
responsible for the full range of modifications (lasting up to 48 hr),
such as those reported in the present study.
Apart from modifications in cycle frequency and gastropyloric
coordination, other feeding-related changes in network activity were
not obvious in our in vivo experiments. This was somewhat surprising given the extent to which both the gastric and pyloric networks in vitro are known to be capable of operational
flexibility under extrinsic modulatory instruction (Dickinson and Nagy,
1983 ; Nagy and Dickinson, 1983 ; Cazalets et al., 1990 ; Meyrand et al., 1991 , 1994 ; Harris-Warrick et al., 1992 ). Two alternative, but not
necessarily mutually exclusive, explanations are possible. The first
possibility is that the steady-state conditions under which our
in vivo experiments were performed (resting, settled animals
fed with a single food type) did not call on the expression of such a
large range of behavioral flexibility. Alternatively, and perhaps more
significantly, our data may indicate the extent to which an assemblage
of widely acting extrinsic influences on motor networks are constrained
by the complete neural (central nervous and sensory information) and
humoral environment of the intact animal. Thus, despite the potential
for individual modulatory STG inputs to switch on and off or to sculpt
distinctly different phenotypes of pyloric and gastric network activity
in vitro (Harris-Warrick et al., 1992 ; Marder and Calabrese,
1996 ), in vivo the combined action of these inputs could
serve more to maintain stable network operation in the face of
behavioral and environmental changes (Chiel and Beer, 1997 ).
Oxygen specifically influences pyloric rhythm frequency
in vivo
A major advantage in this study is the unique anatomical feature
of crustaceans, in that the STG is located in the lumen of the
ophthalmic artery without itself containing any microcirculation. Thus
oxygenation of the STG networks is linked directly and intimately to
levels of circulating blood oxygen, a situation that can be readily
reproduced in vitro (Massabuau and Meyrand, 1996 ). In their
study it was proposed that oxygen acts in a neuromodulator-like manner
on the motor expression of the pyloric network. In brief, it was
postulated that via a specific action on a single member (LP neuron) of
the pyloric network, an acceleration of the entire circuit could be
permitted by an increase in blood PO2. The
reason for such a control process remains a matter of speculation,
although a likely explanation is that oxygen could serve as a limiting factor to reduce metabolic expenditure when high work rates are not
required in interprandial conditions. Our present in vivo results further strengthen this notion, suggesting that low
interprandial PO2 indeed serves as a
constraining factor for network function. In contrast to the pronounced
effect of low PO2 on the pyloric rhythm, we did
not observe any significant oxygen effect on the gastric rhythm (Fig.
8). This may reflect a state-dependent action proposed previously by
Massabuau and Meyrand (1996) , who showed that the effect of oxygen on a
slowly oscillating pyloric network is weak or even absent. Presumably
therefore, some other modulatory factor(s) is responsible for the
acceleration of gastric network rhythmicity after feeding.
Feeding influences the expression of gastropyloric interaction
Concomitant with the frequency changes in pyloric and gastric
networks after feeding is a sudden disappearance of the gastropyloric interaction, which then recovers progressively over the ensuing days
(Fig. 3). The loss of this functional interaction, for which the
synaptic pathway was described recently for H. gammarus
(Clemens et al., 1998 ), thereby allows the two networks to operate
largely independently of each other after feeding.
The switch from coordinated to completely independent modes of activity
associated with feeding could underlie a change between different
functional tasks. For example, the coordinated action of gastropyloric
circuits in unfed animals (Fig.
9A) could serve to mix and
draw digestive enzymes synthesized in the hepatopancreas (Vonk, 1960 ;
Conklin, 1980 ) forward into the anterior foregut. After feeding,
however, the uncoupling of these networks would allow separate
functional roles in the regional processing of ingested food (Fig.
9B).

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Figure 9.
Model of proposed changes in foregut function
before and after feeding. A, Before feeding, at low
PO2, the gastric and pyloric networks
cycle slowly and express an interaction in which PY and MG neuron
bursts are coordinated. During the sustained contraction of the
posterior part of the pylorus attributable to a longer-lasting drive
from the PY neurons, the anterior region (controlled by the LP neuron)
will remain open. This may allow a pumping action of the gastric teeth
to transfer digestive enzymes, present in the pylorus, toward the
stomach and esophagus. B, After feeding, at higher
PO2, the two networks now perform their
separate behavioral tasks (masticatory function of the gastric mill and
filtering function of the pylorus) without a coordinating interaction.
Note that the switch from one functional state to the other is under the control of local PO2 changes at the STG
level.
|
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Coordinating interactions between different networks have been
described in various systems, and their modulation as a function of
behavioral changes has been reported (Funk et al., 1989 ; Young et al.,
1992 ; Bernasconi and Kohl, 1993 ). In most cases, however, neither the
synaptic pathways for coordination nor their modulatory influences are
known (Dickinson, 1995 ). In the model we study, the communicating
synaptic pathway between the gastric and pyloric networks has been
elucidated (Clemens et al., 1998 ), and the present study now proposes a
novel means by which this intercircuit pathway can be modulated.
The gastropyloric interaction is modulated by oxygen
In unfed animals with low blood
PO2, the onset of each gastric MG/LG
neuron burst is followed by a significant prolongation of PY neuron
bursts (Figs. 1C, 2A). As shown
previously, this intercircuit coupling is mediated by an inhibitory
synapse between MG/LG neurons and the pacemaker PD/AB neurons
of the pyloric network (Fig. 1B) (Clemens et
al., 1998 ). After feeding, when blood PO2 is
augmented and both networks are oscillating more rapidly, this interaction disappears (Figs. 2A,
6B1).
One possibility is that the gastropyloric interaction depends
strictly on the frequency of pyloric cycling, appearing only at times
when this network is oscillating relatively slowly. However, our
in vitro experiments, in which the interaction could be
clearly modulated in a PO2 range in which an
alteration in pyloric frequency is weak or absent (Fig. 7), suggested
that this coupling is not merely a frequency-dependent phenomenon but
is itself modulated, either directly or indirectly (such as at a
presynaptic site on an extrinsic input that in turn modulates the
synapse), by arterial PO2. That this regulation
is targeted functionally at the connection between the two networks is
further attested by the fact that in these experiments changes in
PO2 were imposed at the level of the STG only,
with the rostral ganglia maintained under constant ambient conditions.
Therefore, although we do not know whether the change in coupling
efficacy occurs at presynaptic or postsynaptic sites or both, our data
show that oxygen at physiological levels is able to modulate synaptic
communication between two distinct, but behavioral-related, neural
networks.
Conclusions
It is now established that various neuromodulatory influences can
modify the expression of a neural network by regulating both cellular
properties of individual neurons and their synaptic connections (Marder
and Calabrese, 1996 ). Moreover, in recent years evidence has
accumulated for a modulatory role of gaseous substances such as nitric
oxide (Bredt et al., 1990 ; Bredt and Snyder, 1992 ; Pape and Mager,
1992 ; Moroz et al., 1993 ) and carbon monoxide (Zhuo et al., 1993 ) also
acting on neuronal membrane and synaptic properties.
Oxygen has also been shown to modulate cellular properties of neurons
(Krnjevic and Leblond, 1989 ; Jiang and Haddad, 1994 ), including those
of the stomatogastric circuits (Massabuau and Meyrand, 1996 ). However,
to our knowledge, an oxygen-mediated control of synaptic relationships
between central neural networks has not been reported so far, although
the necessarily widespread distribution and regional variability of
oxygen throughout central nervous tissue makes it a likely candidate
for such a role. This could be particularly relevant to the mammalian
CNS, in which regional changes in cerebral blood flow associated with
changes in regional network function are now known (Hofle et al.,
1997 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 24, 1997; revised Jan. 14, 1998; accepted Jan. 20, 1998.
S.C. was supported by two predoctoral grants (ERBCHBICT 930509 and
ERBFMBICT 960693) under the auspices of the 3rd and 4th Framework
program of the European Union, "Human Capital and Mobility" and
"Training and Mobility of Researchers," respectively. A.L. held a
grant by the French Ministry of Research and Education (MESR). This
work also benefitted from a Human Frontier Science Program grant.
Correspondence should be addressed to John Simmers, Laboratoire de
Neurobiologie des Réseaux Université de Bordeaux I and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité Mixte de Recherche 5816, Place de Dr. Peyneau, F-33120 Arcachon,
France.
 |
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