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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 1999, 19(13):5449-5463
Different Proctolin Neurons Elicit Distinct Motor Patterns from a
Multifunctional Neuronal Network
Dawn M.
Blitz1,
Andrew
E.
Christie1, 2,
Melissa J.
Coleman1,
Brian J.
Norris1,
Eve
Marder2, and
Michael P.
Nusbaum1
1 Department of Neuroscience, University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6074, and 2 Volen Center for Complex Systems, Brandeis
University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02454
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ABSTRACT |
Distinct motor patterns are selected from a multifunctional
neuronal network by activation of different modulatory projection neurons. Subsets of these projection neurons can contain the same neuromodulator(s), yet little is known about the relative influence of
such neurons on network activity. We have addressed this issue in the
stomatogastric nervous system of the crab Cancer
borealis. Within this system, there is a neuronal network in
the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) that produces many versions of the
pyloric and gastric mill rhythms. These different rhythms result from
activation of different projection neurons that innervate the STG from
neighboring ganglia and modulate STG network activity. Three pairs of
these projection neurons contain the neuropeptide proctolin. These
include the previously identified modulatory proctolin neuron and
modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) and the newly identified
modulatory commissural neuron 7 (MCN7). We document here that each of
these neurons contains a unique complement of cotransmitters and that each of these neurons elicits a distinct version of the pyloric motor
pattern. Moreover, only one of them (MCN1) also elicits a gastric mill
rhythm. The MCN7-elicited pyloric rhythm includes a pivotal switch by
one STG network neuron from playing a minor to a major role in motor
pattern generation. Therefore, modulatory neurons that share a peptide
transmitter can elicit distinct motor patterns from a common target network.
Key words:
stomatogastric nervous system; crustacea; projection
neurons; neuromodulation; Cancer borealis; central pattern
generators
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INTRODUCTION |
Many neuronal networks produce
multiple motor patterns (Marder and Calabrese, 1996 ), in part because
of activity of different modulatory projection neurons (Norris et al.,
1996 ; Perrins and Weiss, 1996 ; Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ). However, in
many systems it is difficult to record from these neurons. Even in the
systems in which such studies are undertaken, only some projection
neurons have had their transmitter(s) identified (Kuhlman et al.,
1985 ; Nusbaum and Kristan, 1986 ; Nusbaum and Marder, 1989a ; Thorogood and Brodfuehrer, 1995 ; Norekian and Satterlie, 1996 ; McCrohan and
Croll, 1997 ). Consequently, little is known about whether multiple
projection neurons with a common modulatory transmitter influence a
neural network in the same manner. Results from studies using
exogenously applied neuromodulators, pharmacology, and/or stimulation
of neuronal populations suggest a unified role for same
transmitter-containing neurons in their influence on network activity
(McCormick, 1992 ; Aston-Jones et al., 1996 ; Page and Sofroniew, 1996 ;
Edwards and Kravitz, 1997 ; Jacobs and Fornal, 1997 ).
Projection neurons that share a neuromodulator might elicit different
responses from the same network because of the influence of distinct
cotransmitters. The presence of cotransmitters is ubiquitous throughout
all nervous systems (Weiss et al., 1993 ; Lundberg, 1996 ; Brezina and
Weiss, 1997 ). It is also possible that a shared neuromodulator will
affect a network in different ways when released by distinct modulatory
neurons, even in the absence of different cotransmitters. For
neuropeptide transmitters, this could result from a
compartmentalization of their actions, as would occur if their range of
influence was limited by extracellular peptidases (Sigvardt et al.,
1986 ; Coleman et al., 1994 ; Saleh et al., 1996 ) or if they were
released either at different distances from their receptors or in
different amounts (Vilim et al., 1996 ).
These issues can be studied in the crustacean stomatogastric nervous
system (STNS) (Harris-Warrick et al., 1992a ; Marder et al., 1997 ). This
nervous system consists of the stomatogastric ganglion (STG),
esophageal ganglion (OG) and commissural ganglia (CoGs), plus their
connecting and motor nerves. Overlapping subsets of STG neurons
generate the gastric mill and pyloric rhythms, which control the
chewing and filtering behaviors of the foregut, respectively (Weimann
et al., 1991 ; Heinzel et al., 1993 ; Weimann and Marder, 1994 ). In the
crab Cancer borealis, ~20 pairs of projection neurons
innervate the STG, most of which originate in the CoGs and OG (Coleman
et al., 1992 ).
Here, we show that three modulatory projection neurons that innervate
the STG contain the same peptide transmitter, proctolin, but each one
has a distinct complement of cotransmitters. Moreover, under the same
conditions, they each elicit distinct motor patterns from the STG
neural network. This appears to result from the different cellular and
synaptic mechanisms that each proctolin neuron uses for motor pattern
selection, including their use of distinct cotransmitter complements.
Some of this work has appeared previously in abstract form (Nusbaum et
al., 1989 ; Christie et al., 1993 ; Coleman et al., 1993 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. Crabs, C. borealis, were obtained
from commercial suppliers (Boston, MA) and the Marine Biological
Laboratory (Woods Hole, MA). Animals were maintained in aerated
artificial seawater at 10-12°C, and were cold-anesthetized by
packing in ice for 20-40 min before dissection. The stomach, including
the STNS, was removed from the animal, and the rest of the dissection
was performed in chilled (~4°C) physiological saline. Data were
obtained from 190 male crabs.
Solutions. C. borealis physiological saline had
the following composition (in mM): NaCl, 440;
MgCl2, 26; CaCl2, 13; KCl, 11; Trizma base, 10; and maleic acid, 5, pH 7.4-7.6.
Immunocytochemistry. Whole-mount immunocytochemistry was
performed using standard techniques for this system (Beltz and Kravitz, 1983 ; Blitz et al., 1995 ). Briefly, tissue was fixed for 2-24 hr with
either 4% paraformaldehyde or 4% 1-ethyl 3-(3
dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide (EDAC; Sigma, St Louis, MO) in 0.1 M sodium phosphate, pH 7.3. Preparations were then rinsed
five times at 1 hr intervals in 0.1 M sodium phosphate (P)
with 0.3% Triton X-100 (P-Triton, pH 7.3). Tissue was incubated with
primary antibodies for 24-96 hr. Primary antibodies were used at a
final dilution of 1:300-1:1500 (see below). In each case, the primary
antibody was diluted with P-Triton. The tissue was then rinsed as above
and incubated for 15-24 hr with goat anti-rat, goat anti-mouse, and/or
goat anti-rabbit secondary antibodies conjugated to rhodamine or
fluorescein (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA; Boehringer Mannheim,
Indianapolis, IN). The secondary antibody was used at a final dilution
of 1:25-1:300 in P-Triton. Preparations were then rinsed five times at
1 hr intervals with P. They were then mounted between a glass slide and
coverslip with a solution of 80% glycerol and 20% 20 mM
Na2CO3, pH 9.0.
Whole mounts of the STNS were viewed, and images were collected using
either a Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA) MRC 600 or a Leica (Nussloch, Germany)
TCS_NT laser scanning confocal microscope. The Bio-Rad system was
equipped with a Zeiss (Thornwood, NY) Axioskop microscope and a
krypton-argon mixed gas laser plus the Bio-Rad K1 (488 and 560 nm dual
excitation, dual dichroic reflector) and K2 (dichroic, DR 560 LP; green
emission filter, 522 nm DF35; red emission filter, 585 nm, EFLP)
filter sets. The Bio-Rad-supplied Comos software was used for
collecting all images with this system. The Leica TCS_NT system was
equipped with a Leica DMRBE microscope plus a krypton-argon mixed gas
laser. A standard Leica supplied FITC-TRITC filter set (DD488/568, RSP
580, BF530/30, LP 590) and Leica TCS_NT software were used to collect
images with this system.
Data analysis was done on either single optical sections or by
combining the sections into pseudo-colored composite images or stereo
pair images. Sections were combined using a "maximum projection"
program provided by either the Comos software or the Leica TCS_NT
software. To determine whether an immunoreactivity was contained within
a filled structure or whether two immunoreactivities were colocalized
to a single profile, high-magnification images of each dye or label
were collected simultaneously from the same focal plane. Single optical
sections, as well as Z-series stacks were collected for each dye or
immunoreactivity. Simultaneously collected images were merged with
either Comos or TCS_NT software. By pseudocoloring the images red for
rhodamine and green for either Lucifer yellow or fluorescein, regions
of overlap were revealed in both programs as structures colored yellow.
Pixel sizes for these images ranged from ~0.1 to 0.2 µm/pixel.
Confocal micrographs were printed using either a Sony (Tokyo, Japan)
Mavigraph color video printer or a Tektronix (Wilsonville, OR) Phaser
II dye sublimation printer.
All of the primary antibodies used in this study have been used
previously in the crustacean STNS and/or other crustacean tissues, and
the specificity of these antibodies has been characterized. Proctolin
immunoreactivity was detected with three polyclonal proctolin
antibodies, provided by Drs. C. Bishop and M. O' Shea (University of
Sussex, Sussex, UK; proctolinBO) (Bishop et al., 1981 ), Dr. N. Davis (University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ;
proctolinND) (Davis et al., 1989 ), and Dr. H. Agricola (Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat, Jena, Germany;
proctolinHA). The first two were used at 1:300, and
the latter one was used at 1:1500. The proctolinHA antibody labeling within the STNS is indistinguishable from that seen with the
proctolinND and proctolinBO antibodies (A. E. Christie, D. M. Blitz, and M. P. Nusbaum, unpublished
observations) (Marder et al., 1986 ). Marder et al. (1986) showed that
the proctolin immunoreactivity in the STNS is associated with a
substance that is chromatographically indistinguishable from native
proctolin (amino acid sequence RYLPT). Tachykinin-related peptide (TRP) immunoreactivity was examined using a rat monoclonal antibody generated
against substance P (Accurate Chemicals, Westbury, NY) (Goldberg et
al., 1988 ) used at 1:300. This antibody cross-reacts with the native
TRP in the crab STNS, called C. borealis tachykinin-related peptide Ia (CabTRP Ia; APSGFLGMRamide) (Blitz et al., 1995 ; Christie et
al., 1997a ). GABA immunoreactivity was examined using a rabbit polyclonal antibody (Sigma) used at 1:200-1:500 (Christie, 1995 ). Preadsorption controls for GABA immunolabeling in the STNS are described below. Two rabbit polyclonal antibodies generated against FMRFamide were used, including one from INCSTAR Corp. (Stillwater, MN)
(Schmidt and Ache, 1994 ) and FMRFamide antibody 671 (Marder et al.,
1987 ). Both were used at 1:300. Weimann et al. (1993) demonstrated that
the major native FMRFamide-like molecules in C. borealis are
extended FLRFamide peptides (SDRNFLRFamide and TNRNFLRFamide). To
detect histamine-like immunoreactivity, a rabbit polyclonal antibody
generated against histamine (Accurate Chemicals) (Mulloney and Hall,
1991 ) was used. This antibody required the use of an EDAC fixative (see
above) and was used at 1:500 (Christie, 1995 ). Red pigment
concentrating hormone-like immunoreactivity was detected using a rabbit
polyclonal antiserum (Dr. R. Elde, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, MN) (Madsen et al., 1985 ; Nusbaum and Marder, 1988 ) used
at 1:200. Allatostatin-like immunoreactivity was examined using a
rabbit polyclonal antibody at 1:500 (Dr. H. Agricola) (Skiebe and
Schneider, 1994 ).
Preadsorption controls. To confirm that the GABA-like
immunoreactivity seen in the crab stomatogastric nervous system was attributable to the presence of the anti-GABA antibodies and not an
unknown contaminant in the antiserum, we conducted a series of
preadsorption controls. The polyclonal anti-GABA antiserum used in our
study was generated in rabbit against a GABA-bovine serum albumin (BSA)
conjugate. Thus, we used either GABA-BSA conjugate or unconjugated BSA
as a blocking agent in our preadsorption controls. The GABA-BSA
conjugate used in our study was generated via a glutaraldehyde cross-linking reaction (Protein Chemistry Laboratory, Cancer Research Center, University of Pennsylvania). In each blocking experiment, the
anti-GABA antiserum (1:200 final dilution) was incubated with either
GABA-BSA conjugate or unconjugated BSA for 2 hr at room temperature
(~20°C) before incubation with the stomatogastric nervous system.
Incubation of the GABA antiserum with GABA-BSA conjugate
(10 7 M) completely abolished GABA
immunolabeling throughout the stomatogastric nervous system
(n = 4 of 4 preparations; data not shown). In contrast, GABA immunolabeling in preparations in which the antiserum was preincubated with unconjugated BSA (10 7
M; n = 4 of 4 preparations) was no
different from immunolabeling after preincubations at room temperature
with no blocking agent present.
Intracellular dye fills. Microelectrodes used for dye
injections had resistances of 50-70 M . The electrode tip was filled with either 5% Lucifer yellow CH dilithium salt (LY; Sigma) in distilled water or 10% lysine-fixable, anionic rhodamine-dextran, molecular weight 3000 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in distilled water. The electrode was back-filled with 1 M lithium
chloride with an air bubble between the dye and lithium chloride
solutions. Dye was injected into neuronal somata via hyperpolarizing
current pulses (current, 5 nA; rate, 1 Hz; duty cycle, 0.5) through
the electrode for 15-60 min. Intracellular fills of the STG arbor of
modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) were done using DC
hyperpolarizing current injection ( 2 to 5 nA) for 15-60 min into
the stomatogastric nerve axon (SNAX) of MCN1
(MCN1SNAX; Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ).
Electrophysiology. Electrophysiological experiments were
performed using standard techniques for this system (Bartos and
Nusbaum, 1997 ). The isolated STNS (Fig. 1) was pinned down in a
SYLGARD 184 (KR Anderson, Santa Clara, CA)-lined Petri dish. All
preparations were superfused continuously with C. borealis
physiological saline (10-13°C). Extracellular recordings were made
by pressing stainless steel pin electrodes into the SYLGARD alongside
the nerves and isolating each area with Vaseline. The desheathed
ganglia were viewed with light transmitted through a dark-field
condenser (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) to facilitate intracellular recordings.
Intracellular recordings of STG, OG, and CoG somata were made using
microelectrodes (15-30 M ) filled with 4 M potassium
acetate plus 20 mM potassium chloride. Intracellular
current injection was performed using Axoclamp 2 amplifiers (Axon
Instruments, Foster City, CA) in single-electrode discontinuous
current-clamp (DCC) mode. Sample rates during DCC were 2-3 kHz. In
some preparations, MCN1 was stimulated extracellularly via the inferior
esophageal nerve (ion; 10-30 Hz) (Bartos and Nusbaum,
1997 ). The ion was stimulated using a Grass S88 stimulator and Grass
SIU5 stimulus isolation unit (Astro-Med/Grass Instruments, Warwick,
RI). Data were collected on an MT-95000 chart recorder (Astro-Med/Grass
Instruments) and videotape (Vetter Instruments, Rebersburg, PA).
STG neurons were identified on the basis of their axonal projections,
their activity patterns, and their interactions with other STG neurons
(Weimann et al., 1991 ; Norris et al., 1996 ; Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ).
Projection neurons were identified by their soma location, axonal
projection, and influence on the STG network (Nusbaum and Marder,
1989a ; Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ; Norris et al., 1994 ; Blitz and
Nusbaum, 1997 ).
Data. In measuring pyloric cycle frequency for modulatory
proctolin neuron (MPN) and MCN7 stimulations, the mean of 10 consecutive pyloric cycles before and during stimulation were compared.
A pyloric cycle is arbitrarily defined as extending from the start of
one pyloric dilator (PD) neuron burst to the start of the next PD
burst. During MCN1 stimulations, the pyloric cycle frequency was
measured separately during each of the two phases of the gastric mill
rhythm, including the retraction [dorsal gastric (DG) neuron] and
protraction [lateral gastric (LG) neuron] phases. The pyloric cycle
frequency during DG and LG phases was determined from the mean pyloric
cycle frequency during four consecutive DG and LG bursts and compared
with the mean pyloric cycle frequency from 10 consecutive pyloric
cycles before stimulation (Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ).
Phase analysis was performed on data collected from four preparations
for each condition. Phase is defined as the latency to occurrence of an
event relative to the start of a cycle, divided by the cycle period.
Thus, the onset and offset of activity in each neuron after the onset
of a PD neuron burst were measured as a fraction of the total cycle
duration. For saline and MPN stimulation, the average of 10 consecutive
cycles from each preparation was taken. For MCN1 stimulation, pyloric
cycles were categorized based on whether they occurred during a DG or
LG neuron burst. The average of 10 cycles during consecutive DG bursts
and 10 cycles during consecutive LG bursts from each preparation were
measured. For MCN7 stimulation, pyloric cycles were categorized as
long- or short-duration cycles. The mean duration of 10 consecutive pyloric cycles was measured before each MCN7 stimulation. Short duration cycles were then defined as those shorter than one SD above
the mean control pyloric cycle duration. Long-duration cycles were
defined as those longer than 1 SD above the mean control duration. The
averages of 10 short-duration and 10 long-duration cycles were measured
from each preparation.
Statistical significance was determined using paired Student's t
test, performed with SigmaPlot for Windows (version 4.0) and
one-way repeated measures ANOVA or one-way ANOVA and the Tukey t test performed with SigmaStat for Windows (version 2.0).
Data are expressed as mean ± SD. Figures were made by scanning
data with a Hewlett-Packard (Palo Alto, CA) ScanJet IIC scanner, using DeskScan II (version 2.00a) software. Final figures were produced using
CorelDraw (version 3.0 for Windows) or Adobe Photoshop (version 3.0.1 for Silicon Graphics).
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RESULTS |
Anatomy
Using immunocytochemistry paired with dye back-fills of the STG
input nerve, Coleman et al. (1992) demonstrated that there are three
pairs of proctolinergic neurons that project to the STG. No STG neurons
contain proctolin (Marder et al., 1986 ; Coleman et al., 1992 ). Two of
the proctolin neuron pairs originate in the CoGs, whereas the third
pair originates in the OG. Previous work identified the OG pair of
proctolin neurons as the MPNs (Fig. 1A) (Nusbaum and
Marder, 1989a ). In this study we show that another previously
identified neuron pair (MCN1; Fig. 1B) (Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ) is proctolin-immunoreactive. We also identify and characterize the third proctolinergic neuron that innervates the STG
(MCN7; Fig. 1B).

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Figure 1.
Schematics of the stomatogastric nervous system,
including somata location and axonal pathways of the proctolin
projection neurons MPN, MCN1, and MCN7. A, There is a
pair of MPN somata located either in the OG or in the nerve posterior
to this ganglion. Each MPN projects an axon through each
son to the CoG and two axonal branches through the
stn to the STG. It also projects an axonal branch from
each son through the peripheral nerve
dpon. For clarity, the complete projection of only one
MPN is shown. B, There is a single MCN1 and MCN7 in each
CoG. Each MCN1 projects an axon through the ion and
stn to the STG. Each MCN7 projects an axon through the
son and stn to the STG. For clarity, the
complete projection of only one MCN1 and one MCN7 is shown. Ganglia;
CoG, commissural ganglion; OG, esophageal
ganglion; STG, stomatogastric ganglion; nerves:
dgn, dorsal gastric nerve; dpon, dorsal
posterior esophageal nerve; ion, inferior esophageal
nerve; lgn, lateral gastric nerve; lvn,
lateral ventricular nerve; mvn, medial ventricular
nerve; pdn, pyloric dilator nerve; son,
superior esophageal nerve; stn, stomatogastric nerve;
neurons: MCN1, modulatory commissural neuron 1;
MCN7, modulatory commissural neuron 7;
MPN, modulatory proctolin neuron. Anterior is toward the
top, and posterior is toward the
bottom.
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Identification of MCN7
Coleman et al. (1992) demonstrated that there is a single
proctolinergic neuron that projects from each CoG to the STG via the
superior esophageal nerve (son). Here, we document via
intracellular recordings and double labeling experiments that a CoG
neuron that we have designated MCN7 is the proctolin neuron that
projects to the STG via the son. There is a single MCN7 in
each CoG (Fig. 1B). In 60 CoGs, we found only one
neuron per CoG with the projection pathway and influence on the STG
network that we describe below for MCN7. Each MCN7 has a soma and
neuropilar arborization in the CoG and projects an axon through the
son (Fig.
2A). The MCN7 soma is
located on the dorsal surface, usually anteromedially, and has a
maximal cross-sectional diameter of 41.3 ± 2.1 µm
(n = 4). Extending from the soma is a thin neurite
(3.2 ± 0.5 µm; n = 4) that expands into a
larger-diameter neurite (18.7 ± 2.3 µm; n = 4)
from which arise all of the smaller neuropilar processes. The neurite
then decreases in diameter (5.0 ± 2.3 µm; n = 4) as it exits the neuropil and enters the son. This anatomy
is similar to that of other identified CoG projection neurons (Coleman
and Nusbaum, 1994 ; Norris et al., 1994 , 1996 ). Simultaneous
intracellular recordings from the MCN7 soma and extracellular
recordings of the son and the stomatogastric nerve
(stn) show that each action potential elicited in the MCN7
soma occurred, with a constant latency, first in the son and
then in the stn (n = 4) (Fig.
2B). After the action potential in the
stn, a time-locked EPSP was elicited in an STG
neuron, the inferior cardiac (IC) neuron (n = 4) (Fig.
2B), demonstrating that MCN7 projects directly to the STG.

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Figure 2.
Anatomy and projection pathway of MCN7.
A, Confocal image of a LY intracellular fill of MCN7 in
the CoG. Anterior is toward the top, and medial is
toward the right. A thin neurite projects from the MCN7
soma. It expands into a larger neurite, from which the fine processes
arise. The neurite diameter is reduced again to form the axon, which
leaves the CoG via the son. The image is a confocal
composite of 24 optical sections collected at ~2 µm intervals.
B, Overlaid oscilloscope traces were triggered by MCN7
action potentials elicited by injection of depolarizing current into
its soma. Constant latency action potentials were recorded in the
son and stn (arrows),
followed by a constant latency postsynaptic potential in the IC neuron,
an STG network neuron.
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MCN1 cotransmitter complement
There is a single MCN1 in each commissural ganglion. This neuron
projects through the ion and stn to innervate the
STG (Fig. 1B) (Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ). Each MCN1
arborizes within the CoG as well as within the STG. Intracellular LY
fills of MCN1 paired with proctolin immunocytochemistry demonstrated
that this neuron is proctolin-immunoreactive within the CoG
(n = 13) (Fig. 3A, Table
1). Pairing intrasomatic LY fills of MCN1
with GABA immunocytochemistry demonstrated that MCN1 is also
GABA-immunoreactive in the CoG (n = 4) (Fig.
3B, Table 1). We found that MCN1 also contains the peptide
CabTRP Ia in its CoG arbor (n = 5) (Fig. 3C,
Table 1).

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Figure 3.
The CoG and STG arbors of MCN1 contain proctolin,
GABA, and CabTRP Ia. Confocal images of the MCN1 arbor in the CoG and
STG demonstrate the MCN1 transmitter complement in each ganglion. In
all panels, green represents LY, red
represents antibody labeling, and yellow represents
double labeling. A-C, Intracellular LY
fill of MCN1 in the CoG. D-F,
Intracellular LY fill of MCN1 in the STG. Intracellular fills are
paired with proctolin immunocytochemistry (A, D), GABA
immunocytochemistry (B, E), and CabTRP Ia
immunocytochemistry (C, F). All panels show
composite confocal images of eight optical sections taken at ~0.5
µm intervals, with the exception of B, which is a
composite of four optical sections. Note: In many of the images shown
here, there appears to be incomplete colocalization of dye and
immunoreactivity. This is because nearly all modulator immunoreactivity
in the neuropil is confined to varicose swellings present on the
small-diameter terminal branches and is not always found within
processes that connect these varicosities (Christie et al.,
1997c ).
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At the entrance to the STG, the MCN1 axon is relatively large (~10
µm) and can be recorded intracellularly (Nusbaum et al., 1992 ;
Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ). Previous work demonstrated that the STG and
CoG arbors of MCN1 can be functionally compartmentalized (Coleman and
Nusbaum, 1994 ). Thus, we wanted to determine whether the transmitter
complements of the MCN1 arbors in the CoG and STG were also distinct.
To this end, we filled the STG arbor of MCN1
(MCN1SNAX) with LY and used immunocytochemistry to
examine the MCN1 transmitter complement in its STG arbor. We found
that, within the STG, MCN1 processes exhibit the same complement of immunolabeling as occurs in its CoG arbor, namely proctolin (Fig. 3D; n = 10), GABA (Fig. 3E;
n = 4), and CabTRP Ia (Fig. 3F;
n = 12).
All of the CabTRP Ia immunoreactivity within the STG is contained in
the arbors of only two projection neurons (Goldberg et al., 1988 ; Blitz
et al., 1995 ), which we now know to be the two MCN1 neurons. To
determine whether MCN1SNAX was also immunoreactive for
additional transmitters, we conducted double-labeling experiments in
the STG neuropil in which we paired CabTRP Ia immunoreactivity with
other antisera. We found that MCN1SNAX is not
immunoreactive for histamine-like (n = 4), red
pigment-concentrating hormone-like (n = 4), or
allatostatin-like (n = 4) transmitters. We also paired intracellular LY fills of MCN1SNAX with FMRFamide
immunocytochemistry and determined that MCN1SNAX is not
FMRFamide immunoreactive (n = 4). Christie et al.
(1997c) demonstrated that MCN1SNAX also exhibits no
cholecystokinin-like immunoreactivity. MCN1SNAX is not
serotonergic, because all of the serotonin (5-HT) immunoreactivity within the crab STG arises from the arbors of identified sensory neurons (Katz et al., 1989 ).
MPN cotransmitter complement
The two MPN neurons are most commonly located in the esophageal
nerve (on), posterior to the OG (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989a ). MPN projects axonal branches through the stn to the STG and
through each son to each CoG (Fig. 1A).
Nusbaum and Marder (1989a) demonstrated that MPN is
proctolin-immunoreactive. Shown in Figure
4A is an intracellular
LY fill of one MPN. The characteristic teardrop-shaped soma is evident
in the on. In this preparation, both MPNs were physiologically identified and their position was noted, but the second
one was not filled with LY. The nervous system was then processed for
GABA immunocytochemistry, revealing GABA immunoreactivity in the two
MPN neurons (Fig. 4B). The characteristic location of
MPN allows these neurons to be identified on the basis of their anatomical location without previous physiological identification and
intracellular dye filling. Thus, immunocytochemistry alone is
sufficient to determine whether these neurons are likely to contain a
particular neurotransmitter. Therefore, we demonstrated in other
preparations that the MPNs are GABA-immunoreactive using only
immunocytochemistry (Table 1). In 20 of 23 preparations, both MPNs were
located in the on and were GABA-immunoreactive. In the
remaining preparations there was either one MPN located in the
on (n = 2 of 3) or no GABA immunoreactivity
in the OG/on (n = 1 of 3).

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Figure 4.
MPN contains proctolin (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989a )
and GABA, whereas MCN7 contains proctolin but not GABA. In all panels,
green represents LY, red represents
antibody labeling, and yellow represents double
labeling. A, Low-magnification view of an intracellular
LY fill of MPN in the on. The arrow
points to MPN soma. B, Same preparation processed for
GABA immunocytochemistry. Note that the LY-filled soma
(arrow) double labels for GABA immunoreactivity. The
arrowhead indicates second MPN, which was not filled
with LY but exhibits GABA immunoreactivity. A and
B were collected simultaneously and are composite
confocal images of 15 optical sections, each section being ~2 µm
thick. Scale bar is for both images. C, MCN7 is
proctolin-immunoreactive. C1, High-magnification view of
a region of a CoG neuropil from an intracellular LY fill of MCN7 paired
with proctolin immunoctyochemistry. C2,
High-magnification image of a region of the son.
C1 and C2 are from the same preparation
and are composite confocal images of 16 and 8 optical sections,
respectively, taken at 0.5 µm intervals. D, MCN7 is
not GABA-immunoreactive. D1, High-magnification confocal
image of a region of CoG neuropil from an intracellular LY fill of MCN7
paired with GABA immunocytochemistry. D2,
High-magnification image of a region of the son from the
same preparation as D1. Confocal images are composites
of eight optical sections taken at ~0.5 µm intervals. Scale bar in
D1 is for C1 and D1. Scale
bar in D2 is for C2 and
D2.
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Previous immunocytochemical studies have characterized the pattern of
immunoreactivity within the STNS for several neurotransmitters (Marder
et al., 1997 ). Based on the distinct location of the MPNs, we were able
to conclude that these neurons are not immunoreactive for serotonin or
histamine (Beltz et al., 1984 ; Katz et al., 1989 ; Christie, 1995 ) or
TNRNFLRFamide, CabTRP Ia, red pigment-concentrating hormone-like,
allatostatin-like, buccalin-like, myomodulin-like, or
cholecystokinin-like peptides (Marder et al., 1987 ; Goldberg et al.,
1988 ; Nusbaum and Marder, 1988 ; Christie et al., 1994 , 1995 , 1997c ;
Skiebe and Schneider, 1994 ).
MCN7 cotransmitter complement
MCN7 has a smaller-diameter axon than MCN1 as it enters the STG.
Consequently, it is difficult to impale and fill the STG arbor of MCN7.
Thus, all of our intracellular MCN7 fills are restricted to its CoG
arbor. Pairing LY fills of MCN7 with proctolin immunocytochemistry demonstrated that MCN7 is proctolin-immunoreactive (Fig.
4C1,C2; n = 4). Because MCN1 and MPN are
GABA-immunoreactive, we examined whether MCN7 is also
GABA-immunoreactive. The confocal images in Figure 4, D1 and
D2, demonstrate that MCN7 is not GABA-immunoreactive (Table
1; n = 3). As indicated above, all of the CabTRP Ia
immunoreactivity in the STG is from MCN1. Thus, MCN7 is not CabTRP
Ia-immunoreactive (Table 1). Because all of the 5-HT immunoreactivity
in the crab STG is from identified sensory neurons (Katz et al., 1989 ),
MCN7 is not immunoreactive for 5-HT. We have not determined whether MCN7 contains any other transmitters.
Electrophysiology
The STG network produces the pyloric and gastric mill rhythms. We
compared the influence of the three proctolin neurons in preparations
in which the STG remained connected to the CoGs and OG via both the
sons and ions. Under these conditions, there is generally a relatively strong ongoing pyloric rhythm (~1 Hz) and occasionally an ongoing gastric mill rhythm. For all of the data presented here, the control condition consisted of an ongoing pyloric
rhythm and no gastric mill rhythm.
MPN influence on the STG network
Nusbaum and Marder (1989a ,b ) demonstrated that, in preparations
with the CoGs eliminated, MPN stimulation excites the pyloric rhythm.
This includes an increase in pyloric cycle frequency and an increase in
the activity level of several pyloric neurons. MPN never activated a
gastric mill rhythm in those experiments. Nusbaum and Marder (1989a ,b )
were not able to study the MPN influence on ongoing gastric mill
rhythms because, in the crab, the gastric mill rhythm is not
spontaneously active when the CoGs are eliminated (Blitz et al., 1995 ;
Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ; Weimann et al., 1997 ).
More recently, in preparations with the CoGs attached to the STG, Blitz
and Nusbaum (1997) demonstrated that MPN stimulation still increases
the activity level of several of the pyloric neurons. However, they did
not examine the influence of MPN on either the pyloric cycle frequency
or the phase relationships of the neurons participating in the motor
pattern (see below). In our present experiments, we found that in such
preparations MPN stimulation (5-15 Hz) significantly increased the
pyloric cycle frequency (1.01 ± 0.25 to 1.18 ± 0.21 Hz; paired
Student's t test, p < 0.001; n = 13). MPN stimulation also increased the activity
level of at least two of the pyloric neurons, the ventricular dilator
(VD) and IC neurons (Fig. 5;
mvn). In 35 of 35 preparations, MPN stimulation (5-15 Hz)
did not elicit a gastric mill rhythm, which is evident in Figure 5 by
the lack of rhythmic activity in the extracellular recordings of two
gastric mill motor nerves (lgn and dgn). When there was an ongoing gastric mill rhythm, MPN stimulation inhibited this rhythm via its actions in the CoGs (Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ).

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Figure 5.
MPN and MCN1 elicit distinct STG motor patterns.
Left, During saline superfusion and without any neuronal
stimulation, there was an ongoing pyloric rhythm (mvn,
pdn). There was no gastric mill rhythm
(dgn, lgn). Vm: MPN, 72 mV;
MCN1, 66 mV. Middle, When MPN was stimulated (9 Hz),
there was an increase in the activity of IC and VD
(mvn). MPN did not elicit a gastric mill rhythm
(dgn, lgn). Right, When
MCN1 was stimulated (11 Hz), a gastric mill rhythm was elicited, as is
evident from the alternating bursting in the DG (dgn)
and LG (lgn) neurons and the modified VD neuron pattern
(mvn). This pattern is the MCN1-elicited gastric mill
rhythm (Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ). MCN1 stimulation also caused
increased activity in the IC and VD neurons.
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MCN1 influence on the STG network
Earlier work examined the influence of MCN1 stimulation on the STG
network in preparations with the sons transected. Because all but two of the CoG neurons that innervate the STG project through
the son instead of the ion (Coleman et al.,
1992 ), this procedure eliminates most inputs to the STG. In the crab,
the pyloric rhythm always slows and weakens, and sometimes terminates, when the sons are transected. This results from the removal
of one or more spontaneously active projection neurons that provide continuous modulatory drive to the pyloric circuit neurons. With the
sons transected, MCN1 excites the pyloric rhythm and
activates a gastric mill rhythm (Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ; Bartos and
Nusbaum, 1997 ). Bartos and Nusbaum (1997) found that MCN1 stimulation
increases the pyloric cycle frequency, but this frequency is slower
during one phase of the two-phase gastric mill rhythm, when the LG
neuron is active. They showed that this is attributable to rhythmic
presynaptic inhibition of the MCN1 terminals in the STG by the LG
neuron (Coleman et al., 1995 ; Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ).
We found that when the CoGs remained connected to the STG via the
ion and son, MCN1 stimulation elicited either of
two gastric mill motor patterns. In 24 of 30 preparations, MCN1
stimulation (10-20 Hz) excited the pyloric rhythm and elicited the
gastric mill rhythm shown in Figure 5. In these preparations, the
elicited gastric mill rhythm resembled that elicited with the
sons transected. This rhythm included alternating bursting
in the LG and DG neurons and rhythmic LG-timed inhibition of the VD
neuron (Fig. 5). This particular gastric mill rhythm has been
designated the MCN1-elicited gastric mill rhythm (Blitz and Nusbaum,
1997 ). In 4 of 30 preparations, MCN1 stimulation elicited a gastric
mill rhythm that differed from the MCN1-elicited gastric mill rhythm in
several ways. For instance, the cycle frequency was slower, and both IC
and VD activity were suppressed during each LG burst. This gastric mill
rhythm is attributable to coactivity in MCN1 and another CoG projection neuron, called commissural projection neuron 2 (CPN2; Norris et al.,
1994 ), and has been designated the MCN1/CPN2-elicited gastric mill
rhythm (Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ). This rhythm results at least partly
from MCN1 excitation of CPN2 within the CoG (D. M. Blitz and
M. P. Nusbaum, unpublished observations). In the remaining 2 of 30 preparations, repeated stimulations of MCN1 elicited either the
MCN1-elicited or the MCN1/CPN2-elicited gastric mill rhythm within the
same preparation.
In all of these experiments, MCN1 stimulation also excited the pyloric
rhythm. We analyzed the MCN1 excitation of the pyloric rhythm during
times when the MCN1-elicited gastric mill rhythm was also active.
Similar to preparations in which all other CoG influences were
eliminated (Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ), MCN1 stimulation increased the
pyloric cycle frequency but more so during one of the two phases of the
gastric mill rhythm. Specifically, MCN1 stimulation (10-20 Hz)
elicited significant increases in pyloric cycle frequency during each
retraction phase (DG burst) compared with the control pyloric frequency
(1.05 ± 0.20 to 1.20 ± 0.21 Hz; one-way repeated measures ANOVA,
Tukey t test, p < 0.001; n = 12). The pyloric frequency during each protraction phase (LG burst)
was also significantly faster than prestimulation controls (1.05 ± 0.20 to 1.11 ± 0.19 Hz; one-way repeated measures ANOVA, Tukey
t test, p < 0.05), but it was significantly
slower than the cycle frequency during the retraction (DG) phase
(one-way repeated measures ANOVA, Tukey t-test,
p < 0.001).
MCN7 influence on the STG network
MCN7 stimulation elicited an STG motor pattern that differed
considerably from that elicited by either MPN or MCN1. MCN7 stimulation (14-29 Hz) consistently caused the mean pyloric cycle frequency to
decrease significantly (0.91 ± 0.26 to 0.81 ± 0.20 Hz;
paired Student's t test, p < 0.05;
n = 17) (Fig. 6). In
Figure 6, the decreased pyloric frequency is particularly evident in
the extracellular pyloric dilator nerve (pdn)
recording, which displays the activity of the two PD neurons. The PD
neurons are members of the pyloric pacemaker ensemble. During these
longer pyloric cycles, there was a strong activation of the IC neuron,
which produced long-duration bursts of action potentials (Fig. 6;
n = 20). Note that there are long-duration IC neuron
bursts interspersed with shorter-duration IC neuron bursts. These
correlate with long- and short-duration pyloric cycles, respectively
(see pdn). The intensity of VD neuron activity also
increased (Fig. 6). In the same preparations, weaker MCN7 stimulation
(9-17 Hz) did not elicit the longer-duration IC bursts or decrease
the pyloric cycle frequency (n = 8; data not
shown). These stimulations elicited a slight increase in IC and VD
activity and a slight increase in pyloric cycle frequency (0.89 ± 0.20 to 0.99 ± 0.13 Hz; paired Student's
t test, p < 0.05; n = 6).
We have designated the motor pattern resulting from the higher-frequency stimulations (14-29 Hz) the MCN7-elicited motor pattern.

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Figure 6.
MCN7 elicits a distinct STG motor pattern. Before
MCN7 stimulation, there was an ongoing pyloric rhythm
(IC, mvn, pdn) and no
gastric mill rhythm (lgn, dgn). When MCN7 was stimulated
(23 Hz), the IC neuron was strongly excited, and the LG and DG neurons
were activated. There was also a decrease in the average pyloric cycle
frequency, which is most evident in the decreased frequency of the
rhythmic PD neuron bursts (pdn). Note that the IC
and LG neurons were coactive, whereas the DG neuron activity was less
closely correlated to the activity of the other neurons. Most
hyperpolarized Vm: MCN7, 65 mV; IC, 62 mV.
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The MCN7-elicited motor pattern also included activation of some
gastric mill neurons. For example, during MCN7 stimulation, LG fired
bursts of action potentials coincident with the longer-duration IC
bursts (Fig. 6; n = 18). LG activity ranged from a few
to many action potentials per burst, with intraburst firing frequencies of 3-12 Hz. The DG neuron displayed a more variable response, even
within a single preparation. In 16 of 18 preparations, the DG neuron
response to MCN7 stimulation was consistent during repeated stimulations. In these preparations, DG was co-active with LG and IC
(n = 4 of 16), alternated with LG and IC
(n = 1 of 16), fired irregularly (n = 6 of 16), or was silent (n = 5 of 16). In the other two
preparations, the DG neuron was co-active or fired irregularly
(n = 1) or was co-active or silent (n = 1) in response to repeated MCN7 stimulations within the same
preparation. When activated by MCN7 stimulation, DG activity was fairly
weak. Figure 6 demonstrates an example in which DG was primarily
coactive with IC and LG, and it represents the high end of DG neuron
activity during MCN7 stimulation.
The most striking characteristic of the MCN7-elicited motor pattern is
the reduced pyloric cycle frequency associated with long-duration IC
neuron bursts. We aimed to determine whether this was directly
attributable to MCN7 inhibition of the pyloric pacemaker neurons, MCN7
actions on other pyloric neurons or a specific consequence of its
excitation of the IC neuron. We found that IC was responsible for
these events. In Figure 7, the pyloric rhythm was monitored with intracellular recordings of the IC and PD neurons. As shown above and in Figure 7A, the mean
pyloric rhythm frequency was slower, and IC fired longer-duration
bursts during MCN7 stimulation. These extended IC neuron bursts were always correlated with interruptions in the rhythmic PD oscillations and with the increased pyloric cycle durations. When we hyperpolarized the IC neuron and again stimulated MCN7, there was no inhibition evident in PD and no decrease in pyloric cycle frequency (Fig. 7B; n = 9). In fact, there was instead a
small but significant increase in pyloric cycle frequency (1.00 ± 0.21 to 1.06 ± 0.21 Hz; paired Student's t test,
p < 0.05). The pyloric cycle frequency elicited by
MCN7 under this condition is significantly different from that elicited
by MCN7 stimulation without hyperpolarization of the IC neuron (paired
Student's t test, p < 0.05). When IC was
released from hyperpolarization and MCN7 was stimulated, the pyloric
frequency again decreased.

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Figure 7.
MCN7 excitation of the IC neuron causes a
decreased pyloric cycle frequency. A, MCN7 stimulation
(21 Hz) excited IC and caused a decrease in pyloric frequency, evident
in the periodic decrease in frequency of PD neuron bursts. Note the
extended period of hyperpolarization in PD during each extended IC
burst. PD is one of the pyloric pacemaker neurons. B,
When IC was hyperpolarized with constant-amplitude negative current and
MCN7 was again stimulated (21 Hz), there was no decrease in pyloric
cycle frequency. Current injections were via explicitly unbalanced
bridge circuits.
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Hyperpolarization of the IC neuron had less influence on the gastric
mill neuron responses to MCN7. In five of nine preparations, the LG
neuron response to MCN7 stimulation was similar with or without IC
hyperpolarization. In the other four preparations, LG activity was
slightly weaker. At times when the DG neuron was activated by MCN7
stimulation (n = 6 of 9), DG activity was either weaker
(n = 3 of 6) or unchanged (n = 3 of 6)
during hyperpolarization of IC.
Although all three proctolin projection neurons increase IC neuron
activity (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989b ; Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ; Blitz
and Nusbaum, 1997 ; this study), only MCN7 elicited the long-duration IC
bursts and the resulting decreased pyloric cycle frequency. In
addition, MCN7 only had this effect when its firing frequency was >14
Hz (see above). One possible explanation for why MCN7 had a stronger
influence on the IC neuron is that MCN7 might release more
proctolin onto the IC neuron than do MPN and MCN1 when these
neurons fire within the same firing frequency range. Perhaps, if
MPN and MCN1 released more proctolin, they would also elicit the
longer-duration bursts in the IC neuron. We tested this possibility
by stimulating MPN and MCN1 at faster firing frequencies.
In response to intracellular current injection, MPN fired at a maximal
frequency of 30 Hz. This level of MPN activity did not elicit the
longer-duration IC neuron bursts, and there was no decrease in pyloric
cycle frequency (n = 4). We were able to stimulate each
MCN1 extracellularly via the ion (see Materials and Methods)
at 30 Hz for a combined maximal firing frequency of 60 Hz. To be
certain that each MCN1 was firing at 30 Hz, we recorded the LG neuron
intracellularly. LG receives electrical EPSPs from MCN1 (Coleman et
al., 1995 ). By triggering an oscilloscope sweep with each stimulus, we
determined that there was a time-locked compound EPSP in LG elicited by
the coincident action potentials in the two MCN1 neurons
(n = 6). Under these conditions, MCN1 stimulation did
not elicit the longer-duration IC neuron bursts, and there was no
decrease in pyloric cycle frequency (n = 6).
Distinct motor patterns elicited by proctolin neurons
We have described the major distinctions in the three proctolin
neuron motor patterns. That is, MPN elicits a pyloric motor pattern,
MCN1 elicits a gastropyloric motor pattern, and MCN7 elicits a slower
pyloric motor pattern that is dominated by IC neuron bursts. The MCN7
motor pattern also incorporates a neuron, LG, normally associated with
the gastric mill rhythm. To further characterize the differences among
these three motor patterns, we performed a quantitative comparison of
the pyloric component of each motor pattern. First, we
determined whether there was a significant difference in the pyloric
cycle frequency elicited by each proctolin neuron. The pyloric cycle
frequency elicited by MCN7 stimulation is significantly different from
that elicited by MPN stimulation (one way ANOVA, Tukey t
test, p < 0.001). The pyloric cycle frequency
elicited by MCN7 stimulation is also significantly different from
the pyloric cycle frequency elicited by MCN1 stimulation during the LG
(p < 0.001) and DG (p < 0.001) phases (one way ANOVA, Tukey t test). There were no
significant differences among the control pyloric cycle frequencies
occurring before stimulation of each proctolin neuron.
To characterize further the pyloric component of the three proctolin
neuron motor patterns, we performed phase analyses on three pyloric
neurons that are active for at least a portion of each motor pattern.
This analysis allowed us to compare the relative onset, offset, and
duty cycle of the PD, IC, and VD neurons within a pyloric cycle. Duty
cycle is defined as the portion of a cycle during which a neuron is
active. For the MCN1 motor pattern, we performed a separate phase
analysis for the retraction (DG) and protraction (LG) phases of the
gastric mill rhythm (see Materials and Methods). Also, for the MCN7
motor pattern we analyzed short-duration pyloric cycles separately from
long-duration cycles. Short-duration cycles were identified as those in
which the cycle duration was <1 SD above the mean control cycle
duration. Long-duration cycles were those longer than the mean + 1 SD
of the control cycle duration (see Materials and Methods). Figure
8 illustrates that there are several
significant differences between the motor patterns elicited by each of
the three proctolin neurons. Figure 8, left panels, shows
phase diagrams for each pattern, and the asterisks in the right panels denote statistically significant
differences between the corresponding pattern on the left and the other
four motor patterns.

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Figure 8.
Selective stimulation of MPN, MCN1, or MCN7
elicits different pyloric motor patterns. Left, The
mean ± SD phase of burst onset and offset for the PD, IC, and VD
neurons during a pyloric cycle is plotted during MPN, MCN1, and MCN7
stimulation. One pyloric cycle was arbitrarily designated as beginning
with the onset of a PD neuron burst (phase = 0) and ending with
the onset of the next PD burst (phase = 1). Pyloric cycles during
MCN1 stimulation were divided into those occurring during either the
retraction (DG neuron burst) or the protraction (LG neuron burst) half
of the gastric mill rhythm. Pyloric cycles during MCN7 stimulation were
divided into short- and long-duration cycles. Short-duration cycles are
those that are shorter than the mean + 1 SD of the control pyloric
cycle period before stimulation. Long-duration cycles are those longer
than 1 SD above the mean control pyloric cycle period before
stimulation. For each of the five conditions shown, 10 cycles per
preparation were measured from four preparations. During MCN1-DG phase
pyloric cycles, the IC neuron was not always active. Thus there were
only 18 total measurements for this parameter. During MCN7
long-duration cycles and MCN1-LG phase cycles, there are only 10 total
measurements each of VD phase onset and offset, because the VD neuron
was often silent during these patterns. For details of analysis, see
Materials and Methods. Right, For each parameter (e.g.,
PD neuron burst offset, IC neuron burst onset) a one-way ANOVA was
conducted followed by multiple comparisons using the Tukey
t test. Asterisks represent significant
differences. For IC neuron burst onset and offset, all significant
differences represent p < 0.001. For PD and VD
phase, significant differences range from p < 0.05 to p < 0.001.
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The most dramatic differences between the motor patterns involved the
IC neuron. For example, during long-duration MCN7 cycles, the IC neuron
duty cycle was greater than in any other condition (Fig. 8)
(n = 4 preparations for each condition). This was
mostly attributable to a significant phase delay in IC neuron burst
offset during this motor pattern. During the MCN1 motor pattern, the IC
neuron was not active during every pyloric cycle. Specifically, the IC
neuron was active during only 18 of 40 pyloric cycles occurring during
the DG phase of the gastric mill rhythm. When IC was active at these
times, its duty cycle was shorter than during any of the other four
motor patterns (Fig. 8). This resulted from significant differences in
both IC neuron burst onset and offset compared with those occurring in
the other motor patterns. The PD neuron offset was more similar than
for IC activity across all motor patterns, although it occurred
significantly later during both phases of the MCN1 pattern compared
with the MPN or MCN7 patterns (Fig. 8). The VD neuron was active during
every cycle (40 of 40) of each motor pattern except the MCN7
long-duration cycles (10 of 40 pyloric cycles) and the MCN1-LG phase
cycles (10 of 40 pyloric cycles). Moreover, during the latter
condition, VD neuron burst onset occurred significantly later than
during MCN7 short duration cycles or MCN1-DG phase cycles. There were
no differences in VD neuron offset during MCN1, MPN, or MCN7
stimulation (Fig. 8). Also noteworthy in Figure 8 is that the only pair
of pyloric motor patterns that exhibited no significant differences
between them were the MCN7 short-duration cycles and the MPN motor pattern.
It remained possible that the different motor patterns elicited by MPN,
MCN1, and MCN7 were attributable to variability between preparations.
To test this possibility, we sequentially stimulated more than one of
these neurons in the same preparation. Under these conditions, we
compared the STG response to stimulation of MPN and MCN1 (26 preparations) (see Fig. 5), MPN and MCN7 (6 preparations), MCN1 and
MCN7 (11 preparations), or all three proctolin neurons (2 preparations). In all cases, MPN elicited the pyloric motor pattern,
MCN1 elicited the gastropyloric pattern, and MCN7 elicited the pyloric
pattern dominated by IC bursts described above.
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DISCUSSION |
This study demonstrates that modulatory projection neurons can
have a neuropeptide transmitter in common and still elicit distinct
motor patterns from a common target network. We have found that there
are three modulatory projection neurons that innervate the crab STG and
contain the same peptide transmitter. However, each of these neurons
contains a distinct cotransmitter complement and elicits distinct
motor patterns from the STG network (Fig.
9). MCN1 stimulation selects a gastric
mill rhythm and a modified pyloric rhythm. MPN and MCN7 stimulation
select distinct pyloric motor patterns without activation of the
gastric mill rhythm. The pyloric rhythm elicited by MCN7 is
significantly slower, because of the enhanced activity of a pyloric
circuit neuron. A gastric mill neuron is also incorporated into this
latter rhythm.

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Figure 9.
Summary of the distinct motor patterns elicited
from the crab STG network by selective activation of the proctolin
neurons MCN1, MPN, and MCN7. Top, MCN1 contains the
transmitters CabTRP Ia, GABA, and proctolin, and it elicits a
gastropyloric motor pattern. MPN contains proctolin and GABA but not
CabTRP Ia. It elicits a particular pyloric rhythm and no gastric mill
rhythm. MCN7 contains proctolin but not GABA and CabTRP Ia. MCN7
elicits a distinct pyloric motor pattern, which is dominated by IC
neuron bursts. During this motor pattern, IC neuron activity regulates
the pyloric frequency. Bottom, Schematic representation
of the motor patterns elicited by MCN1, MPN, and MCN7.
Boxes represent bursts of action potentials in an
individual neuron.
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In many systems, it has proven difficult to locate and/or manipulate
neural network inputs. Thus, techniques such as exogenous application
of modulatory transmitters (Harris-Warrick et al., 1992b ; McCormick,
1992 ; Pearson, 1993 ; Aston-Jones et al., 1996 ; Ramirez and Richter,
1996 ; Sillar et al., 1997 ) and the simultaneous activation of groups of
input neurons (Aston-Jones et al., 1996 ; Grillner et al., 1997 ; Lalley
et al., 1997 ; Wannier et al., 1998 ) are commonly used to study
modulation of network activity in vertebrate and invertebrate systems.
Information from such studies suggests a shared role for multiple input
neurons that contain the same modulatory transmitter and influence the
same behavior (McCormick, 1992 ; Aston-Jones et al., 1996 ; Page and
Sofroniew, 1996 ; Edwards and Kravitz, 1997 ; Jacobs and Fornal, 1997 ).
Although the actions of individual modulatory neurons on
multifunctional networks have been studied in several systems (Pearson,
1993 ; Marder and Calabrese, 1996 ), there are few preparations in which
the transmitters of these neurons have been catalogued so that a
comparison of the effects of bath-applied and neurally released
transmitter can be made. In the few preparations in which this has been
possible, there are some instances in which bath application does
indeed mimic neuronal activity (Kuhlman et al., 1985 ; Nusbaum and
Marder, 1989b ; McCrohan and Croll, 1997 ). However, this may be the
exception rather than the rule. As demonstrated here, populations of
same transmitter-containing neurons that project to a common target network can represent a heterogeneous population. We show that three
input neurons with the same peptide transmitter elicit distinct motor
patterns from their target network. It is likely that these different
motor patterns result at least partially from the unique complement of
cotransmitters in each of these proctolin neurons (Wood and Nusbaum,
1998 ). In other systems as well, there do not appear to be common
pairings or groupings of cotransmitters in multiple-transmitter neurons
(Walker and Holden-Dye, 1991 ; Furness et al., 1992 ; Zupanc, 1996 ).
In addition to having distinct cotransmitter complements, the three
proctolin neurons each use other distinct strategies to elicit their
respective STG motor patterns. For instance, one of the unique aspects
of the MPN motor pattern is its suppression of the gastric mill rhythm
(Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ). MPN inhibits the gastric mill rhythm via its
actions in the CoGs, where it inhibits projection neurons (MCN1 and
CPN2) that activate the gastric mill rhythm (Blitz and Nusbaum, 1997 ).
MCN1 also influences other projection neurons. When the CoGs remain
connected to the STG, MCN1 stimulation elicits the MCN1/CPN2-elicited
gastric mill rhythm in some preparations. This results at least partly
from MCN1 excitation of CPN2 within the CoGs (Blitz and Nusbaum,
unpublished observations). Although in some systems it has been
demonstrated that parallel inputs can act independently (Juranek and
Metzner, 1998 ), it is likely that interactions among parallel inputs
are not unique to the crab stomatogastric system (Brodfeuhrer and Burns, 1995 ; Faumont et al., 1996 ). The synaptic actions of a projection neuron that occur onto parallel pathways outside of the
target network would not be mimicked by bath application to a neuronal network.
MCN1 stimulation elicits a pyloric rhythm that differs from the MPN and
MCN7 pyloric rhythms. This is partly attributable to MCN1 also
eliciting a gastric mill rhythm, which alters the activity of some
pyloric neurons because they participate in both the pyloric and
gastric mill rhythms. For example, during the MCN1-elicited motor
pattern, the IC and VD neurons display activity patterns linked to both
the pyloric and gastric mill rhythms. Both their level of activity and
their phase relationships differ during the two gastric mill phases
(see Figs. 5, 8). Additionally, the gastric mill rhythm regulates MCN1
excitation of the pyloric rhythm (Coleman and Nusbaum, 1994 ; Bartos and
Nusbaum, 1997 ; this study). This regulation occurs via presynaptic
inhibition from the LG neuron onto the STG terminals of MCN1 (Coleman
et al., 1995 ). There are no such interactions involving LG and either MCN7 or MPN. Presynaptic regulation of input neuron activity occurs in
many neural networks, although the function of these presynaptic actions has only been identified in a few systems (Nusbaum, 1994 ; Nusbaum et al., 1997 ; Lomeli et al., 1998 ). There can be no presynaptic inhibition of bath-applied transmitter. Not surprisingly then, the STG
response to MCN1 stimulation is not the same as co-applying the MCN1
transmitters (Christie et al., 1997b ; D. E. Wood and M. P. Nusbaum, unpublished observations).
In addition to the strategies discussed above, some aspects of the
motor patterns elicited by the three proctolin neurons result from
their actions on different populations of STG target neurons. For
example, only MCN1 and MCN7 excite the LG and DG neurons. However, the
proctolin neurons also have different influences on common target
neurons. For instance, all three proctolin neurons excite the IC
neuron, but the actions of MCN7 on IC are considerably stronger than
those of MPN and MCN1. The dramatic change in IC neuron activity
elicited by MCN7 may be attributable to an as yet unidentified
cotransmitter in MCN7. Supporting this possibility is the fact that, in
preparations with the CoG inputs eliminated, bath-applied proctolin
(10 6 M) increases the pyloric cycle
frequency and excites the IC neuron, but IC does not fire long-duration
bursts (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989b ). Furthermore, IC does not cause a
decrease in pyloric cycle frequency when excited by MPN or MCN1
stimulation, even when they fire at frequencies above those of MCN7.
However, the actions of applied proctolin and stimulation of MPN or
MCN1 include excitation of other pyloric neurons that inhibit the IC
neuron (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989a ; Bartos and Nusbaum, 1997 ; Blitz and
Nusbaum, 1997 ). This may limit IC neuron burst duration and intensity.
Therefore, an alternative possibility to an unidentified cotransmitter
is that MCN7 might have a stronger or more selective proctolin-mediated influence on the IC neuron. In support of this possibility, our phase
analysis demonstrates that the short-duration pyloric cycles during
MCN7 stimulation are similar to the MPN motor pattern that is mimicked
by bath-applied proctolin (Nusbaum and Marder, 1989b ). Thus, MCN7 may
elicit its motor pattern by using a higher concentration of proctolin
to influence the IC neuron than its other target neurons. This might be
mediated by increased proctolin release near the proctolin receptors on
the IC neuron, a higher proctolin receptor concentration on IC near
MCN7 release sites, and/or a lower density of proctolin-cleaving
peptidases (Coleman et al., 1994 ) in the region of MCN7 release sites
that influence IC. Also supporting a role for proctolin in the IC
neuron response to MCN7 stimulation is an in vivo study by
Heinzel et al. (1993) in C. pagurus in which proctolin
application (10 6 M) elicited a motor
pattern similar to that elicited by MCN7 stimulation in
vitro.
Under usual conditions, the IC neuron plays little or no role in
setting the pyloric rhythm frequency (Hooper and Marder, 1987 ).
Nevertheless, in response to MCN7 stimulation, the IC neuron strongly
influences pyloric cycle frequency. This is likely to be a result of
MCN7 altering the IC neuron membrane properties and/or its synaptic
actions. Modulation of these properties is a well documented mechanism
for altering neural network activity in many systems (Katz and Frost,
1995 ; Marder and Calabrese, 1996 ; Calabrese and Feldman, 1997 ;
McDearmid et al., 1997 ; Ayali et al., 1998 ).
Previous work dissecting the neural network response to neuropeptide
application concluded that it is equally important to document which
network components are and are not direct targets of peptide action
(Hooper and Marder, 1987 ). Similarly, with respect to understanding the
response of a multifunctional network to neurally released peptide, it
is evident that issues such as cotransmission, compartmentalization of
peptide action, local interactions with network neurons, and
interactions among parallel inputs must be considered. These issues
increase the complexity of transmitter action and demonstrate the
diversity that can exist in the function of a single neurotransmitter.
There is still much to be learned about the mechanisms that allow
different neurons with the same peptide transmitter to have distinct
actions on network activity. Future work aimed at understanding the
cellular details of such mechanisms will enable us to gain greater
understanding of how multifunctional neural networks obtain their
considerable flexibility.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 17, 1999; revised April 8, 1999; accepted April 8, 1999.
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grants
IBN94-96264 and IBN98-08356 (M.P.N.), National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Grants NS29436 (M.P.N.), F32-NS09718 (A.E.C.), and NS17813 (E.M.), National Institute of Mental Health Training Grant MH-17168, and the Human Frontiers Science Program. We
thank Drs. Debra Wood and David Perkel for advice on statistical analysis and data presentation.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael P. Nusbaum,
Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, 215 Stemmler Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6074.
Dr. Blitz's present address: Department of Organismal Biology and
Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637.
Dr. Coleman's present address: Division of Neurobiology, Barrow
Neurological Institute, St. Joseph's Hospital, Phoenix, AZ 85013.
Dr. Norris's present address: Biology Program, California State
University, San Marcos, CA 92096.
 |
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June 1, 2006;
95(6):
3617 - 3632.
[Abstract]
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T. P. Norekian and A. Y. Malyshev
Neural Mechanisms Underlying Co-Activation of Functionally Antagonistic Motoneurons During a Clione Feeding Behavior
J Neurophysiol,
April 1, 2006;
95(4):
2560 - 2569.
[Abstract]
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S. P. Lieske and J.-M. Ramirez
Pattern-Specific Synaptic Mechanisms in a Multifunctional Network. II. Intrinsic Modulation by Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors
J Neurophysiol,
March 1, 2006;
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1334 - 1344.
[Abstract]
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V. Thirumalai, A. A. Prinz, C. D. Johnson, and E. Marder
Red Pigment Concentrating Hormone Strongly Enhances the Strength of the Feedback to the Pyloric Rhythm Oscillator But Has Little Effect on Pyloric Rhythm Period
J Neurophysiol,
March 1, 2006;
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1762 - 1770.
[Abstract]
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D. I. Messinger, K. K. Kutz, T. Le, D. R. Verley, Y.-W. A. Hsu, C. T. Ngo, S. D. Cain, J. T. Birmingham, L. Li, and A. E. Christie
Identification and characterization of a tachykinin-containing neuroendocrine organ in the commissural ganglion of the crab Cancer productus
J. Exp. Biol.,
September 1, 2005;
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[Abstract]
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D. M. Blitz, M. P. Beenhakker, and M. P. Nusbaum
Different Sensory Systems Share Projection Neurons But Elicit Distinct Motor Patterns
J. Neurosci.,
December 15, 2004;
24(50):
11381 - 11390.
[Abstract]
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D. E. Wood, Y. Manor, F. Nadim, and M. P. Nusbaum
Intercircuit Control via Rhythmic Regulation of Projection Neuron Activity
J. Neurosci.,
August 25, 2004;
24(34):
7455 - 7463.
[Abstract]
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J.-M. Goaillard, D. J. Schulz, V. L. Kilman, and E. Marder
Octopamine Modulates the Axons of Modulatory Projection Neurons
J. Neurosci.,
August 11, 2004;
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7063 - 7073.
[Abstract]
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M. P. Beenhakker and M. P. Nusbaum
Mechanosensory Activation of a Motor Circuit by Coactivation of Two Projection Neurons
J. Neurosci.,
July 28, 2004;
24(30):
6741 - 6750.
[Abstract]
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A. E. Christie, S. D. Cain, J. M. Edwards, T. A. Clason, E. Cherny, M. Lin, A. S. Manhas, K. L. Sellereit, N. G. Cowan, K. A. Nold, et al.
The anterior cardiac plexus: an intrinsic neurosecretory site within the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab Cancer productus
J. Exp. Biol.,
March 1, 2004;
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1163 - 1182.
[Abstract]
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M. P. Beenhakker, D. M. Blitz, and M. P. Nusbaum
Long-Lasting Activation of Rhythmic Neuronal Activity by a Novel Mechanosensory System in the Crustacean Stomatogastric Nervous System
J Neurophysiol,
January 1, 2004;
91(1):
78 - 91.
[Abstract]
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J. T. Birmingham, C. P. Billimoria, T. R. DeKlotz, R. A. Stewart, and E. Marder
Differential and History-Dependent Modulation of a Stretch Receptor in the Stomatogastric System of the Crab, Cancer borealis
J Neurophysiol,
December 1, 2003;
90(6):
3608 - 3616.
[Abstract]
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H.-Y. Koh, F. S. Vilim, J. Jing, and K. R. Weiss
Two Neuropeptides Colocalized in a Command-Like Neuron Use Distinct Mechanisms to Enhance Its Fast Synaptic Connection
J Neurophysiol,
September 1, 2003;
90(3):
2074 - 2079.
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Y. Furukawa, K. Nakamaru, K. Sasaki, Y. Fujisawa, H. Minakata, S. Ohta, F. Morishita, O. Matsushima, L. Li, V. Alexeeva, et al.
PRQFVamide, a Novel Pentapeptide Identified From the CNS and Gut of Aplysia
J Neurophysiol,
June 1, 2003;
89(6):
3114 - 3127.
[Abstract]
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P. Telgkamp, Y. Q. Cao, A. I. Basbaum, and J.-M. Ramirez
Long-Term Deprivation of Substance P in PPT-A Mutant Mice Alters the Anoxic Response of the Isolated Respiratory Network
J Neurophysiol,
July 1, 2002;
88(1):
206 - 213.
[Abstract]
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D. E. Wood and M. P. Nusbaum
Extracellular Peptidase Activity Tunes Motor Pattern Modulation
J. Neurosci.,
May 15, 2002;
22(10):
4185 - 4195.
[Abstract]
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P. Skiebe
Neuropeptides are ubiquitous chemical mediators: Using the stomatogastric nervous system as a model system
J. Exp. Biol.,
March 8, 2002;
204(12):
2035 - 2048.
[Abstract]
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V. Thirumalai and E. Marder
Colocalized Neuropeptides Activate a Central Pattern Generator by Acting on Different Circuit Targets
J. Neurosci.,
March 1, 2002;
22(5):
1874 - 1882.
[Abstract]
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W. Rathmayer, S. Djokaj, A. Gaydukov, and S. Kreissl
The Neuromuscular Junctions of the Slow and the Fast Excitatory Axon in the Closer of the Crab Eriphia spinifrons Are Endowed with Different Ca2+ Channel Types and Allow Neuron-Specific Modulation of Transmitter Release by Two Neuropeptides
J. Neurosci.,
February 1, 2002;
22(3):
708 - 717.
[Abstract]
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J. Jing and K. R. Weiss
Neural Mechanisms of Motor Program Switching in Aplysia
J. Neurosci.,
September 15, 2001;
21(18):
7349 - 7362.
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E. Svensson, S. Grillner, and D. Parker
Gating and Braking of Short- and Long-Term Modulatory Effects by Interactions between Colocalized Neuromodulators
J. Neurosci.,
August 15, 2001;
21(16):
5984 - 5992.
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A. M. Swensen and E. Marder
Modulators with Convergent Cellular Actions Elicit Distinct Circuit Outputs
J. Neurosci.,
June 1, 2001;
21(11):
4050 - 4058.
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N. L. Scholz, J. de Vente, J. W. Truman, and K. Graubard
Neural Network Partitioning by NO and cGMP
J. Neurosci.,
March 1, 2001;
21(5):
1610 - 1618.
[Abstract]
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Y. Le Feuvre, V. S. Fenelon, and P. Meyrand
Ontogeny of Modulatory Inputs to Motor Networks: Early Established Projection and Progressive Neurotransmitter Acquisition
J. Neurosci.,
February 15, 2001;
21(4):
1313 - 1326.
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D. E. Wood, W. Stein, and M. P. Nusbaum
Projection Neurons with Shared Cotransmitters Elicit Different Motor Patterns from the Same Neural Circuit
J. Neurosci.,
December 1, 2000;
20(23):
8943 - 8953.
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A. M. Swensen and E. Marder
Multiple Peptides Converge to Activate the Same Voltage-Dependent Current in a Central Pattern-Generating Circuit
J. Neurosci.,
September 15, 2000;
20(18):
6752 - 6759.
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D. J. Baro, A. Ayali, L. French, N. L. Scholz, J. Labenia, C. C. Lanning, K. Graubard, and R. M. Harris-Warrick
Molecular Underpinnings of Motor Pattern Generation: Differential Targeting of Shal and Shaker in the Pyloric Motor System
J. Neurosci.,
September 1, 2000;
20(17):
6619 - 6630.
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D. M. Blitz and M. P. Nusbaum
Distinct Functions for Cotransmitters Mediating Motor Pattern Selection
J. Neurosci.,
August 15, 1999;
19(16):
6774 - 6783.
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