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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2000, 20(4):1622-1634
Paradoxical Actions of the Serotonin Precursor
5-hydroxytryptophan on the Activity of Identified Serotonergic Neurons
in a Simple Motor Circuit
David J.
Fickbohm and
Paul S.
Katz
Department of Biology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia
30302
 |
ABSTRACT |
Neurotransmitter synthesis is regulated by a variety of factors,
yet the effect of altering transmitter content on the operation of
neuronal circuits has been relatively unexplored. We used
electrophysiological, electrochemical, and immunohistochemical
techniques to investigate the effects of augmenting the serotonin
(5-HT) content of identified serotonergic neurons embedded in a simple
motor circuit. The dorsal swim interneurons (DSIs) are serotonergic
neurons intrinsic to the central pattern generator (CPG) for swimming
in the mollusc Tritonia diomedea. As expected, treatment
with the serotonin precursor 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) increased the
intensity of serotonin immunolabeling and enhanced the potency of
synaptic and modulatory actions elicited by the DSIs. It also greatly
enhanced the ability of the DSIs to evoke rhythmic CPG activity. After
5-HTP treatment, microvoltammetric measurements indicated an increase
in a putative 5-HT electrochemical signal during swim CPG activation.
Paradoxically, the spiking activity of the serotonergic neurons
decreased to a single burst at the onset of the rhythmic motor program,
whereas the overall duration of the episode remained about the same.
5-HTP treatment gradually reduced the rhythmicity of the CPG output. Thus, more serotonin did not result in a more robust swim motor program, suggesting that serotonin synthesis must be kept within certain limits for the circuit to function correctly and indicating that altering neurotransmitter synthesis can have serious consequences for the output of neural networks.
Key words:
intrinsic neuromodulation; central pattern generator; neurotransmitter content; serotonin immunoreactivity; Tritonia
diomedea; synaptic actions; microvoltammetry; confocal
fluorescence microscopy
 |
INTRODUCTION |
5-HTP, the immediate precursor of
serotonin (5-hydroxy-tryptamine, 5-HT), has clinical significance
for various mental disorders (Byerley et al., 1987
; Silverstone, 1992
;
Launay et al., 1994
; Handley, 1995
). It is available as a nutritional
supplement in the United States and has been touted in the popular
press as a means of boosting the activity of the serotonin system. At
the cellular level, precursor treatment is a well established method for increasing neurotransmitter synthesis (Cottrell and Powell, 1971
;
McCaman et al., 1984
; Audesirk, 1985
; Lookingland et al., 1986
;
Kabotyanskii and Sakharov, 1991
). Furthermore, artificially raising
neurotransmitter levels can potentiate synaptic release from neurons
(Poulain et al., 1986
; Pothos et al., 1996
). However, the consequences
of altering transmitter levels, particularly 5-HT levels, on neuronal
activity within neural circuits are poorly understood. To examine the
effects of 5-HTP on serotonergic neurons and on their role in circuit
operation, we have used a simple neuronal circuit containing identified
serotonergic neurons.
The system that we used is the small, well characterized central
pattern generator (CPG) circuit for escape swimming in the nudibranch mollusc Tritonia diomedea (Fig.
1A) (Willows and Hoyle, 1969
; Getting, 1989a
). The output of the interneurons comprising the
CPG (Fig. 1B) directly reflects the motor neuron
activity underlying the rhythmic body flexions of the swim (Dorsett et al., 1969
; Abraham and Willows; 1971
). Generation of the escape swim
motor program is dependent on 5-HT release (McClellan et al., 1994
).
Many cells in the ganglia comprising the brain of Tritonia
contain 5-HT (Fig. 1C) (McCaman et al., 1984
; McClellan et
al., 1994
; Sudlow et al., 1998
) and are involved in controlling a
variety of behaviors. One set of physiologically identified serotonergic neurons, the dorsal swim interneurons (DSIs), is intrinsic
to the swim CPG (Getting, 1977
, 1989a
,b
; McClellan et al., 1994
; Katz
et al., 1994
). The DSIs fire repetitive bursts of action potentials
(APs) during the swim motor program, contributing to the dorsal flexion
phase of the behavior (Fig. 1B) (Getting et al.,
1980
; Getting, 1981
; Getting and Dekin, 1985
).

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Figure 1.
The neurons comprising the swim network of
Tritonia mediate production of the rhythmic escape swim
pattern. A, Schematic of the swim CPG with input and
output connections. Sensory input is relayed through the dorsal ramp
interneuron (DRI) to the CPG, which consists of
the dorsal and ventral swim interneurons (DSIs and
VSIs) and cerebral interneuron 2 (C2).
The swim interneurons influence the activity of swim flexion neurons:
the ventral flexion neurons (VFN) and dorsal
flexion neurons (DFNa and DFNb). Synapses
are represented as excitatory (triangles), inhibitory
(circles), or multicomponent (triangles
and circles). Polysynaptic or unidentified cells and
connections are represented as dotted lines. The DSIs
recruit inhibition from unidentified inhibitory neurons
(I, dotted circle). Each neuron shown in
this diagram has a contralateral homolog. B,
Simultaneous intracellular recordings from a DFNa, C2, and DSI display
the nerve-evoked escape swim motor program in an untreated isolated
nervous system. At the arrow, pedal nerve 3 was
stimulated with 2 msec voltage pulses at 10 Hz for 1 sec.
C, Confocal image of serotonin immunoreactivity in the
brain of Tritonia. Shown are the left and right fused
cerebropleural ganglia (central portion of figure) and
pedal ganglia (lateral). The DSIs are situated in
the cerebropleural ganglia (dotted circles). Note that
not all 5-HT-immunoreactive cells are present bilaterally (e.g., the
large cell marked by an asterisk in left pedal
ganglion). The putative areas of 5-HT release from the DSIs within
serotonergic neuropil areas are indicated by the
arrows.
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5-HT released from the DSIs plays a dual role. It serves as a
conventional neurotransmitter, evoking fast and slow synaptic potentials (Katz and Frost, 1995b
). 5-HT also acts a neuromodulator (Katz, 1999
), increasing the cellular excitability and synaptic strength of other CPG neurons (Katz et al., 1994
; Katz and Frost, 1995a
,b
, 1997
).
In this circuit, individual serotonergic neurons and their actions on
postsynaptic targets are stable and can be monitored for days, allowing
assessment of changes in serotonergic synaptic strength after precursor
treatment. In this regard, the Tritonia swim CPG is a model
system for studying 5-HT supplementation effects on neuronal circuit
output. The results of such studies may have implications for more
complicated vertebrate systems. Our findings indicate that although
increasing the level of serotonin dramatically enhances the potency of
serotonergic neurons, feedback from other circuit elements results in a
decrease in their participation in CPG activity and ultimately in a
disruption of the motor pattern.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation. Specimens of Tritonia
diomedea were obtained from Living Elements Limited (Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada). The CNS, consisting of left and right
fused cerebropleural and pedal ganglia and associated nerve roots, was
removed from animals and immediately placed in normal saline chilled to
2°C. Normal saline consisted of (in mM:) 420 NaCl, 10 KCl, 10 CaCl2, 50 MgCl2, 10 D-glucose, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.6. The ganglia were pinned down in a Sylgard-lined chamber.
After clearing off connective tissue, removing the ganglionic sheath,
and attaching suction electrodes to nerves, the preparation was
returned to its physiological temperature of 10°C through continuous
superfusion with chilled saline. Isolated ganglia were allowed to sit
unstimulated overnight before use in electrophysiology experiments. For
experiments examining synaptic potentials, high divalent cation saline
consisting of (in mM:) 285 NaCl, 10 KCl, 25 CaCl2, 125 MgCl2, 10 D-glucose, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.6, was used to
increase firing thresholds and thus decrease the contribution of
polysynaptic connections. The drugs, 5-HTP (L-2-amino-3[5-hydroxyindolyl]-propionic acid)
and 5-HT (serotonin creatinine sulfate) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) were
applied to the bath by switching superfusion inflow reservoirs. The
superfusion flow rate was 1-1.5 ml/min. The estimated time for
complete bath exchange was 4 min. In most experiments, 5-HTP was
applied at 1 or 2 mM for 30-60 min. However,
similar effects are seen after treatment with a lower concentration of
5-HTP (10 µM, n = 3) (S. Clemens, personal communication).
Electrophysiology. Neurons were impaled with glass
microelectrodes filled with 4 M potassium acetate and
having resistances of 5-15 M
. Up to four simultaneous intracellular
recordings were made using a pair of AxoClamp 2B (Axon Instruments,
Foster City, CA) amplifiers. Recordings were digitized at >1 kHz and
stored on a Pentium computer using hardware and software from Cambridge Electronic Design Limited.
Neurons were identified using physical and electrophysiological
criteria, including location, coloration, synaptic connectivity, and
participation in fictive swims (Getting, 1977
; Taghert and Willows,
1978
; Getting et al., 1980
). We typically recorded from the same
individual identified neurons on two or three consecutive days to
monitor the effects of experimental manipulations. A preparation was
considered to be in the "rested" state if it had not produced a
swim motor program in the previous 3 hr.
Swim CPG activity corresponding to a fictive swim was elicited with
electrical stimulation (10-15 pulses, 2 msec pulse duration, 5-10 V,
10-20 Hz) of left or right pedal nerve 3 (PdN3) through a suction
electrode. The swim motor program was defined as the nerve-evoked swim
CPG activity beginning at the nerve stimulus and ending at the last
major hyperpolarization of DSI (corresponding to the last ventral phase).
APs were elicited at defined frequencies (as indicated) in DSIs or
cerebral interneuron 2 (C2) by intracellular current injection with
very brief pulses (7-10 nA, 20 msec duration) that each triggered a
single AP. EPSPs evoked by stimulation (five pulses at 5 Hz, every 60 sec) of DSI or C2 in synaptic followers were measured in high
divalent cation saline to limit activation of polysynaptic pathways.
The amplitudes of summated EPSPs (i.e., compound EPSPs evoked by a DSI
AP train) were measured as the voltage excursion from baseline to peak.
The amplitudes of individual EPSPs were measured either from a stable
baseline (for initial or single EPSPs) or from a falling baseline (for
subsequent EPSPs in a train). Facilitation of EPSP amplitude was
measured as the percentage of the third EPSP amplitude compared to the
first EPSP amplitude in a train of EPSPs evoked by 5 Hz DSI activity.
To examine the effect of 5-HTP on the modulatory actions of DSI
stimulation while avoiding unwanted activation of polysynaptic pathways
and rhythmic bursting in CPG neurons, parameters were chosen to be less
intense than those previously used (Katz et al., 1994
; Katz and Frost,
1995a
,b
, 1997
). To determine the effect of 5-HTP treatment on DSI
modulation of interneuron C2 excitability in normal saline, C2 was
depolarized via current injection (+2 nA, 2 sec duration) every 60 sec,
and the average instantaneous spike frequency (inverse interspike
interval) for C2 was calculated. Every 240 sec, the C2 stimulation was
preceded by DSI activity (15 pulses at 5 Hz), ending 2 sec before C2
depolarization. The effect of 5-HTP treatment on the potency of DSI
modulation of C2 synaptic strength was examined in high divalent cation
saline. C2 was stimulated to fire a train of APs (five pulses at 5 Hz) at 60 sec intervals. The synaptic strength of C2 was measured as
the summated amplitude of EPSPs (baseline to peak) evoked by C2 in the
dorsal flexion neuron (DFNa). DFNa was held at
70 mV with
two-electrode current clamp. A train of APs (5-15 pulses at 5-10 Hz)
was stimulated in DSI every 120 sec, ending 2-6 sec before C2
activity. In two of the seven experiments performed for this analysis,
gramine (100 uM, Sigma) was used to block the fast synaptic
potentials evoked by DSI stimulation. Gramine does not block the
neuromodulation by DSI of the synaptic strength of C2 (Katz and
Frost, 1995b
). The results of these experiments were the same as
experiments done without gramine present and were combined for
analysis. The amplitude of the summated EPSPs was measured either from
a stable baseline or from a falling baseline where appropriate.
For the electrophysiology experiments examining the effects of 5-HTP
treatment on nerve-evoked swim CPG activity, DSI synaptic strength, and
DSI neuromodulation of C2 excitability and synaptic strength, each
preparation served as its own internal control. Thus, the same cells
were recorded from before and after 5-HTP treatment.
Electrochemistry. Microvoltammetric measurements of
5-HT-like signals were measured with an IVEC-10 (Harvard Apparatus,
Holliston, MA) in chronoamperometry mode (O'Neill, 1994
). Single
Nafion-coated carbon fiber electrodes (8 µm diameter, 50 µm length)
were inserted 50 µm into areas of the cerebropleural ganglion that
have previously been determined to contain axonal branches of the DSIs
(Getting et al., 1980
). Oxidation and reduction currents evoked by 5 Hz square voltage steps (0 V to + 650 mV, 50% duty cycle) were integrated and averaged once per second by IVEC-10 software. Before each experiment, the system was calibrated by measuring the current generated by exposure to varying concentrations of 5-HT (0-2
µM, in normal saline). Changes in signal observed after
nerve stimulation are relative and do not represent absolute 5-HT
concentration. Although the oxidation and reduction currents are
typical of 5-HT, and the anion-repelling Nafion coating increases
specificity, lacking further characterization, the measured signals may
represent the release or production of electroactive compounds in
addition to 5-HT. Therefore, we have represented them as arbitrary
concentration units (ACU) for which one ACU is the equivalent of the
signal produced by 1 µM 5-HT in vitro.
Furthermore, the signal is almost certainly attributable to overflow
from synapses rather than a direct measure of synaptic release, which
presumably takes place in a much smaller area and over a faster time scale.
Immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemistry was performed on
tissue treated with 0.5% type XIV protease for 5 min and fixed overnight at 4°C in paraformaldehyde-lysine-periodate fixative (McLean and Nakane, 1974
). Ganglia were washed by rinsing two times (30 min) with cacodylate buffer [0.2 M cacodylic acid (Na salt) in 0.3 M NaCl, pH 7.5], followed by two rinses (30 min) with 4% Triton X-100 in PBS (consisting of 50 mM Na2HPO4 and
140 mM NaCl, pH 7.2). The ganglia were then incubated in
antiserum diluent (ASD; consisting of 0.5% Triton X-100, 1% normal
goat serum, and 1% bovine serum in PBS) for 1 hr. The preparations were incubated for 72 hr in primary antiserum (rabbit anti-5HT; DiaSorin, Stillwater, MN) diluted in ASD at 1:10,000 for quantification of 5-HT levels or 1:1000 to enhance visualization of neurons with low
levels of 5-HT immunoreactivity. After rinsing in 0.5% Triton X-100 in
PBS (6 hr), the ganglia were exposed overnight to secondary antibody
(goat anti-rabbit conjugated to Cy2; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West
Grove, PA) diluted 1:50 in ASD. After this, the ganglia were washed
with 0.5% Triton X-100 (in PBS) for 6 hr, dehydrated in a graded
series of ethanol washes, cleared in methyl salicylate, and mounted and
coverslipped on microscope slides using Cytoseal 60 (Stephens
Scientific, Kalamazoo, MI).
5-HT immunofluorescence was visualized with a laser-scanning confocal
microscope (LSM 510; Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) using a 10 or 20×
objective, argon laser excitation at 488 nm, and a 505 nm long-pass
emission filter. Within each processing group, ganglia were dissected
from animals within minutes of each other and placed in perfusion
chambers, as described above. The experimental ganglia received 2 mM 5-HTP for 60 min, whereas the control ganglia continued
to receive normal saline during that time. Both control and
experimental ganglia were washed for 20 hr, fixed, and processed for
immunohistochemistry in parallel, using aliquots of the same solutions,
and visualized using identical confocal microscope settings (gain, scan
rate, etc.) to minimize fluorescent signal variability. We measured
5-HT immunofluorescence intensity in cell bodies or groups of cell
bodies by averaging the pixel intensity within a defined border from
8-bit y-axis maximum projection images using the LSM510
software. Background fluorescence (measured from nonstaining cell
bodies) was subtracted from all intensity measurements. The mean
intensity of the neurons within a processing group was in arbitrary
intensity units (0-255 range). These values are strictly comparable
only for preparations within a processing group. To compare intensities
among processing groups, neuronal intensities in each group were
normalized by dividing the average intensity of each cell body by the
highest average cellular intensity in the group. The unitless,
normalized intensity values are thus in the range of 0.00 (background
staining level) to 1.00 (maximum for that group). Note that because of
the inherently nonlinear nature of immunohistochemistry, these
measurements of immunofluorescence intensity may only be taken as an
estimation of 5-HT levels in cells and do not represent actual 5-HT
content. However, the technique does allow comparisons of relative 5-HT
immunoreactivity, sufficient to determine if precursor treatment alters
5-HT levels.
Statistics. All values given as mean ± SEM. SigmaStat
(version 2.0; Jandel Scientific, Corte Madera, CA) was used to
calculate significance. Parametric or nonparametric comparisons of data groups were performed when appropriate. The comparison used for each
specific group of results is mentioned in the Results section. Differences were considered significant if p
0.05.
 |
RESULTS |
Formation of 5-HTP from tryptophan by the enzyme tryptophan
hydroxylase is thought to be the rate-limiting step in 5-HT synthesis. Bypassing this step with 5-HTP supplementation results in rapid 5-HT
production through 5-HTP decarboxylation (Boadle-Biber, 1982
; Cooper et
al., 1996
). Previous work in molluscs demonstrated that 5-HTP can be
taken up by neurons (Pentreath and Cottrell, 1972
, 1973
; Audesirk,
1985
) and converted to 5-HT (Cottrell and Powell, 1971
; McCaman et al.,
1984
). We used 5-HTP treatment as a means of increasing the 5-HT
content of all serotonergic neurons, including the DSIs. We then
examined what effect this had on DSI potency and how it altered their
participation in the swim CPG.
5-HTP treatment enhances serotonin immunoreactivity
To determine whether 5-HTP treatment specifically increased the
5-HT content of serotonergic neurons or whether it caused widespread
synthesis of 5-HT in normally nonserotonergic neurons, we examined the
effect 5-HTP treatment on serotonin immunoreactivity. Ganglia were
bathed in 5-HTP (2 mM for 30 min) and then allowed to sit
overnight (20 hr) before fixing and processing for serotonin immunohistochemistry. The levels of immunofluorescence in treated brains were normalized and compared to those of untreated, control, preparations to allow comparisons across processing groups (see Materials and Methods).
5-HTP treatment increased the intensity of 5-HT immunofluorescence in
all groups of serotonergic neurons, including the DSIs, the
serotonergic swim CPG interneurons (Fig.
2A,B). The average normalized 5-HT immunofluorescence intensity of the DSIs increased by 32% after 5-HTP treatment, a significant change (Table
1, Fig. 2C,D). 5-HTP treatment
also increased the immunofluorescence of other serotonergic neurons,
such as the neurons clustered posteriolaterally in the dorsal pedal
ganglion (Fig. 2A,B, arrow). The immunofluorescence levels of these unidentified cells were measured as a group instead of
individually and were normalized. 5-HTP treatment (2 mM, 30 min) significantly increased the
normalized 5-HT immunofluorescence levels in the dorsal, posterolateral
group of pedal neurons by 58% (Table 1).

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Figure 2.
5-HTP treatment increased the intensity of 5-HT
immunofluorescence in Tritonia. The DSIs are
circled in each image. Note that the relative
orientation of the three DSIs is somewhat variable from animal to
animal and even different among contralateral homologs.
A, C, E, Untreated control preparations.
B, D, F, Preparations treated with 5-HTP
(2 mM, 60 min, 1 d before fixation). A,
B, Comparison of 5-HT staining in the two halves of the same
brain. Only the right half (B) received the 5-HTP
treatment, which increased the intensity of labeling in all
serotonergic cells. In this illustration, the effect of 5-HTP is most
apparent in the DSIs (circled), the giant serotonin
cerebral cell C1 (top of image), and the posteriolateral
group of pedal neurons (large groups of cells indicated by
arrow). C, D, 5-HTP treatment increased
the intensity of staining in the DSIs and caused the appearance of 5-HT
immunoreactivity in a pair of neurons lateral to the DSIs (D,
square). Note the variable level of DSI staining in the control
preparation (C). The 5-HT immunofluorescence is
also increased in the two medial (to the right) serotonergic cells,
previously identified by Sudlow et al. (1998) . The preparations shown
in A-D were processed with 5-HT antiserum at 1:10,000
dilution. For illustration purposes, the paired images,
A and B and C and
D, were contrast-enhanced to the same degree within each
pair, to accentuate the effects of 5-HTP treatment on 5-HT
immunofluorescence. E, F, Treatment with 5-HTP increased
the number of neurons displaying low levels 5-HT immunoreactivity
(F, arrows). To increase the sensitivity of the staining
procedure, the antiserum dilution was decreased to 1:1000, and the
amplifier gain of the photodetectors was increased, resulting in a
saturation of normal 5-HT staining in the DSIs
(circled). Images C-F are from left
cerebropleural ganglia.
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Most of the normally non-5-HT-immunoreactive neuronal somata remained
negative for 5-HT staining after 5-HTP treatment (Fig. 2, compare
A, B). However, a bilaterally represented pair of
unidentified cells, located lateral to the DSIs, were not observed in
untreated preparations (n = 8) (Fig. 2C),
but exhibited strong 5-HT immunoreactivity after 5-HTP treatment
(n = 8) (Fig. 2D, square).
In addition, 5-HTP treatment resulted in the appearance of 5-HT
immunoreactivity in two bilaterally represented groups of neurons on
the ventral surface of the brain (data not shown). One group of newly
5-HT immunoreactive neurons was located posteriolateral to the giant C1
neuron on the ventral side of the cerebral ganglion and consisted of
~22 cell bodies ranging in diameter from 40 to 100 µM. The other group of newly 5-HT
immunoreactive neurons was located on the anterior ventral surface of
the pedal ganglion and consisted of ~40 cell bodies, ranging in
diameter from 20 to 60 µM.
We also found an increase in the consistency of low-intensity 5-HT
immunolabeling of neurons, near the DSIs, that had been previously
reported to express a low level of 5-HT immunoreactivity (Sudlow et
al., 1998
) (Fig. 2E,F). Under conditions that
maximized staining (high primary antiserum concentration and increased
gain on the photodetectors), we did not observe any staining in these cells in 8 of 13 control preparations (Fig. 2E).
However, under identical staining conditions, these cells were
observable in all of the 13 5-HTP-treated preparations examined (Fig.
2F).
5-HTP does not have acute, short-term actions
We examined whether 5-HTP acted purely as synthesis precursor or
whether it also had direct effects on 5-HT receptors. Application of
5-HTP (1-2 mM) did not evoke any immediate actions on
neurons within the swim system, as monitored electrophysiologically.
There were no noticeable changes in either the resting membrane
potentials or non-swim firing rates of the DSIs and other swim
interneurons during the 30-60 min of 5-HTP application
(n = 13). By contrast, 5-HT
(10
4 M) depolarized DSI and C2, causing
them to fire APs within 5 min of the start of bath application
(n = 2; data not shown). Additionally, we observed that
within 6-8 min, 5-HT triggered rhythmic swim CPG activation, as
previously reported (McClellan et al., 1994
), whereas 5-HTP never
triggered rhythmic activity during exposures of up to 60 min. Nor did
5-HTP block nerve stimulation from evoking a swim motor program,
indicating that, at the concentrations used, 5-HTP does not act as an
agonist or antagonist of serotonin receptors.
Treatment with 5-HTP increases the amplitude of DSI-evoked
synaptic potentials
The effect of 5-HTP treatment on the strength of DSI-evoked
monosynaptic serotonergic EPSPs recorded in postsynaptic followers was
examined. As expected, 5-HTP treatment (1 or 2 mM, 30-60
min) enhanced the subsequent potency of the DSIs at evoking synaptic actions (Fig. 3). One day after 5-HTP
treatment, the summated fast EPSP recorded in a dorsal flexion neuron
(DFNa) in response to DSI stimulation (five pulses at 5 Hz) was 204%
of the control value, a highly significant increase (Table 1). 5-HTP
treatment also significantly increased the amplitude of the summated
EPSPs evoked by the DSIs in another CPG interneuron, C2, by 238%
(Table 1). In untreated preparations recorded over similar periods, DSI-evoked EPSPs never increased in amplitude.

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Figure 3.
The synaptic effects of DSI were enhanced 1 d
after treatment with 5-HTP. A, Simultaneous
intracellular recordings from a dorsal flexion neuron
(DFNa) and cerebral interneuron C2 before and after (*)
5-HTP treatment (1 mM, 30 min) show an increase in the size
of EPSPs evoked by DSI stimulation (5 Hz, 1 sec). B,
5-HTP treatment (*) resulted in superthreshold responses to a longer
duration 5 Hz DSI spike train. DFNa membrane potential was maintained
at 70 mV before DSI stimulation with current injection in
two-electrode current-clamp mode. Despite the fact that all recordings
in this figure were made in high divalent cation saline to suppress
polysynaptic communication, some recruited EPSPs are apparent in the
5-HTP traces in B.
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The increase in DSI fast synaptic actions appears to be attributable to
an enhancement of homosynaptic facilitation rather than an increase in
the amplitude of single DSI-evoked EPSPs. Individually evoked EPSPs
recorded in a DFNa were not significantly different in amplitude after
5-HTP treatment (Table 1). However, the degree of facilitation (see
Materials and Methods) of EPSPs evoked in DFNa by DSI firing at 5 Hz
significantly increased; the amplitude of the third EPSP, relative to
the first EPSP, increased by 85% (Table 1). Thus, the effect of 5-HTP
treatment was only apparent when examining EPSPs evoked by DSI spike
trains: greater facilitation resulted in larger summated EPSPs and
caused DFNa to reach AP threshold during prolonged DSI stimulation
(Fig. 3B).
5-HTP treatment enhances the strength of DSI
neuromodulatory actions
In addition to classical synaptic actions, DSI stimulation also
evokes two neuromodulatory actions that have been attributed to release
of 5-HT: enhancement of C2 excitability and presynaptic facilitation of
C2 synaptic strength (Katz et al., 1994
; Katz and Frost, 1995a
,b
,
1997
). Neither modulatory effect was observed to increase over time in
untreated preparations. We tested whether 5-HTP treatment augmented the
neuromodulatory potency of the DSIs.
To test the effect of 5-HTP treatment on the ability of the DSIs to
enhance C2 excitability, we chose stimulation parameters that resulted
in a very small neuromodulatory effect under control conditions (Fig.
4A). Before treatment,
DSI stimulation (5 Hz, 3 sec) did not significantly increase the
average instantaneous spike frequency (ISF) of C2 (Fig. 4C).
However, 20 hr after 5-HTP treatment, although baseline C2 excitability
was higher, the same DSI stimulus now produced a further significant
enhancement of C2 excitability (Table 1, Fig. 4B-D).
The increased basal C2 excitability after 5-HTP treatment may be
attributable to a direct effect of 5-HTP exposure or an increase in
tonic 5-HT release from serotonergic cells in the brain.

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Figure 4.
5-HTP treatment increases C2 excitability and the
potency of DSI neuromodulation. A, Under conditions
designed to limit swim CPG activity, DSI has little effect on C2
excitability. C2 excitability is quantified as the spiking response to
a 2 sec 2 nA depolarizing current pulse applied every 60 sec. The
inverse interspike interval or instantaneous spike frequency (ISF) is
displayed in the top trace. Stimulation of a DSI (15 pulses at 5 Hz, ending 2 sec before C2 depolarization) has no
significant effect on the spiking response of C2. B,
After 5-HTP treatment (2 mM, 30 min, 20 hr before
measurement), the same stimulation paradigm results in an increase in
basal C2 excitability and a further enhancement of C2 excitability by
DSI. C, 5-HTP treatment enhances the average basal C2
ISF and its modulation by DSI. Under control conditions, the average
ISF was not significantly different if C2 was stimulated alone
(white bar) or if preceded by DSI stimulation
(black bar). After 5-HTP treatment, the average C2 ISF
increased significantly when C2 was stimulated alone. A further
significant increase was seen when C2 was depolarized after DSI
stimulation. The asterisk indicates a significant
difference (p < 0.05, one-way repeated
measures ANOVA with Tukey post hoc test;
n = 6). D, 5-HTP treatment
significantly increases DSI neuromodulatory enhancement of C2 average
ISF (p = 0.002, n = 6;
paired t test). The data in D represent a
further analysis of the data shown in C and depict the
enhancement of C2 average ISF (% Avg ISF) by DSI activity before
(Control) and 20 hr after 5-HTP treatment
(5-HTP treated). All recordings were obtained in normal
saline.
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Serotonin released from the DSIs also modulates C2 synaptic strength,
acting presynaptically to enhance transmitter release (Katz et al.,
1994
; Katz and Frost, 1995a
,b
). We examined the effect of 5-HTP
treatment on C2-evoked EPSPs recorded in the postsynaptic follower DFNa
(see Materials and Methods). Using DSI stimulation parameters (5 Hz, 10 sec) previously used for demonstrating DSI modulation of C2 synapses,
5-HTP treatment increased the extent and duration of the DSI modulatory
action, causing a large increase in the size of C2-evoked synaptic
potentials (Fig. 5) (n = 2). As previously reported, under control conditions (Fig.
5A,C) the modulatory actions
dissipated by 20 sec after a DSI stimulus. However, after 5-HTP
treatment, there was still a robust enhancement of C2 synaptic strength
even 1 min after DSI stimulation (Fig. 5B,C).

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Figure 5.
5-HTP treatment increases DSI neuromodulation of
C2 synaptic strength. A, Under control conditions, DSI
enhanced the C2-evoked summated EPSP in a dorsal flexion neuron, DFN,
when C2 was stimulated 3 sec after the end of the AP train in DSI. But
60 sec after that, the EPSP was back to pre-DSI levels.
B, After 5-HTP treatment (1 mM, 40 min, 24 hr before recording), an AP train in DSI evokes a much larger response
in C2 and the DFN. The C2-evoked EPSP in DFN, while increased 3 sec
after DSI stimulation (but not discernible in the midst of the myriad
polysynaptic EPSPs and one truncated AP; however, see part
C), is even larger 60 sec later. C,
Faster timescale depictions of the summated C2-evoked EPSPs from the
control and 5-HTP-treated recordings show the long-lasting modulation
of C2 synaptic strength by DSI. The overlapped traces from control and
5-HTP-treated conditions correspond to the summated EPSPs, denoted by
i, ii, and iii in
A and B, respectively. The summated EPSPs
have been baseline- adjusted for comparison. The additional fast EPSP
in the 5-HTP-treated group immediately preceded summated EPSP
ii (from B) and originated from some cell
other than the C2 or DSI. For both control and 5-HTP-treated
conditions, the DSI was stimulated at 2 Hz for 10 sec. The C2 was
stimulated to fire four APs at 20 Hz for the control and five APs after
5-HTP treatment. The number of APs fired by C2 was increased to
facilitate measurement of the summated EPSP.
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Although 5-HTP increased the effectiveness of DSI stimulation at
enhancing C2 synaptic strength, it is unlikely that the result shown in
Figure 5 is attributable entirely to a direct action of the DSI on C2;
clearly other neurons were recruited by the DSI stimulus. We therefore
switched to a shorter (1 sec), less effective DSI stimulus train to
examine the effect of 5-HTP on this modulatory action. Under control
conditions this DSI stimulus had a more modest and variable effect on
the size of C2-evoked synaptic potentials, enhancing them on
average by 51 ± 23%. After 5-HTP treatment, DSI stimulation
enhanced C2-evoked responses by 112 ± 32%, a significant
increase over control conditions (Table 1).
5-HTP treatment enhances the DSI potency at evoking rhythmic
CPG activity
Previously, it was reported that tonic depolarization of C2 could
elicit a rhythmic swim motor program (Getting, 1977
; Taghert and
Willows, 1978
), but tonic depolarization of one or more DSIs was not
sufficient to trigger a swim motor program from a rested state (Lennard
et al., 1980
). Based on the known organization of the swim network,
with the DSIs being the sole recipient of synaptic input from the
dorsal ramp interneuron (DRI) (Fig. 1A), it
seemed that DSI activity ought to be sufficient to trigger the swim
motor program. However, depolarization of one or more DSIs with a
constant current pulse never evoked prolonged bursting activity in
untreated preparations (Fig.
6A).

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Figure 6.
Treatment with 5-HTP greatly enhanced the ability
of the DSIs to trigger a rhythmic swim-like motor program.
A, In a control preparation, injection of a brief
depolarizing current pulse (2 nA, 4 sec) into a DSI did not evoke
sustained rhythmic activity in other CPG neurons. The DSI reached an
average firing rate of 10 Hz. This example represents the largest
effect of brief DSI stimulation seen: DSI recruited synaptic inputs to
C2 and caused a delayed period of weak firing. B, In a
control, untreated preparation, making a single DSI fire tonically at
10 Hz enabled rhythmic bursting in other CPG neurons that resembled a
swim motor program. The DSI was made to fire at a constant frequency
through injection of repeated brief current pulses (20 msec duration, 8 nA); each elicited a single DSI AP. The individual APs are obscured by
stimulus artifacts. C, One day after 5-HTP treatment,
injection of a brief depolarizing current pulse (1.5 nA, 3 sec) into a
DSI was sufficient to trigger a sustained period of rhythmic activity
in the C2 sec (same preparation and cells as in A). The
firing rate of the DSI did not exceed 5 Hz, and the DSI did not
continue to fire rhythmically during the C2 bursting as it would during
a nerve-evoked swim motor program in an untreated preparation. All
recordings were obtained in normal saline. For each case, the overall
stimulation of the DSI starts at the up arrow and ends
at the down arrow. Calibration: 20 mV, 20 sec.
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The reason that constant current depolarization of the DSIs was
insufficient to trigger a rhythmic motor pattern may be because this
method of excitation did not cause the DSIs to fire action potentials
at a sufficiently high frequency. The DSIs exhibit spike frequency
adaptation, which limits their ability to fire rapidly for prolonged
periods of time. Furthermore, each DSI recruits inhibition onto itself
and onto the other DSIs from a set of, as yet, unidentified
interneurons (Fig. 1A) (Getting et al., 1980
; Getting
and Dekin, 1985
). However, these self-limiting features can be
overridden when a DSI is driven to spike tonically using brief current
pulses (see Materials and Methods). Firing a single DSI at 5-20 Hz in
this manner, it was often possible to evoke a bursting motor program.
The periodicity of this rhythmic bursting pattern was very similar to
the nerve-evoked swim motor program. Unlike with nerve stimulation
however, there was a long latency to the first burst after the start of
DSI firing (25 ± 2 sec; n = 12) (Fig.
6B). Also, unlike the swim motor program elicited by
nerve stimulation, which continues for up to a minute after the end of
the stimulus, the rhythmic bursting activity was not sustained for more
than one cycle after the suspension of DSI stimulation.
After 5-HTP treatment, the ability of the DSIs to elicit prolonged
rhythmic activity was dramatically increased. Now, brief depolarization
of one DSI could trigger a prolonged depolarization of the C2 neurons
and rhythmic bursts of APs that far outlasted the DSI activity
(n = 5) (Fig. 6C). Although the bursting
pattern again had a similar frequency to the nerve-evoked swim motor
program, there were distinct differences in the appearance of the
bursts. Most noticeably, during these prolonged bouts of DSI-triggered activity, the DSIs themselves did not fire rhythmic bursts of APs, and
the C2 bursts were punctuated by hyperpolarizations that were weaker
than those in the nerve-evoked swim motor program.
The activity patterns of swim CPG neurons are altered by
5-HTP treatment
Given that the DSIs are components of the swim CPG circuit and
that their synaptic and modulatory actions are greatly enhanced by
5-HTP treatment, we wanted to know what effect 5-HTP treatment has on
nerve-evoked swim CPG activity. One day after 5-HTP treatment, there
was a profound and persistent change in the CPG activity in all 17 preparations examined. Before 5-HTP treatment, nerve stimulation
typically evoked motor programs that consisted of two to eight cycles
of bursting activity in all of the swim CPG interneurons (Fig.
7A) (Getting, 1989a
). When
observed 20 hr or more after 5-HTP treatment, cyclic bursting activity
was absent in the DSIs, yet, paradoxically, general activity in the
neural circuit remained high (Fig. 7B). Instead of
displaying their typical pattern of activity, the DSIs fired a single
brief burst of APs after the nerve stimulus and then were silent or
fired sporadically in a nonbursting fashion (n = 17).
Thus, nerve-evoked DSI spiking activity decreased 74% after treatment
(Table 1). Despite the decrease in DSI spiking, the average length of
nerve-evoked swim CPG output from other cells significantly increased
by 33% after 5-HTP treatment (Table 1). It is highly likely that all
six of the DSIs exhibited this change in behavior because it was
observed for each of the DSIs from which we recorded. The change in DSI firing is not attributable to the duration of the recording session; in
untreated preparations, the DSIs continued to exhibit a normal cycle-by-cycle participation in nerve-evoked swim CPG activity for at
least 2 d in vitro (n = 10).

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Figure 7.
5-HTP treatment greatly changes the nerve-evoked
output of the swim CPG. A, Under control conditions,
stimulation of pedal nerve 3 (10 Hz, 1 sec at arrowhead)
evoked an eight-cycle swim motor program. Rhythmic bursting activity
was recorded simultaneously in a DSI, C2, and a DFN. B,
Twenty hours after 5-HTP treatment, the same nerve stimulus
(arrowhead) evoked a very different pattern of activity.
C2 was strongly excited and fired bursts of action potentials without
the pronounced interburst hyperpolarizations seen under control
conditions. After 5-HTP treatment, the DSI fired only a single burst of
APs in response to nerve stimulation and fell silent while C2 remained
depolarized and bursting. Vertical scale bars are 20 mV for all traces.
All recordings were obtained in normal saline.
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The effects of 5-HTP treatment on nerve-evoked C2 activity differed
greatly from those on DSI. In approximately half of 5-HTP-treated preparations observed 20 hr after treatment, nerve-elicited C2 activity
consisted of a long-lasting depolarization accompanied by sustained AP
generation and was not rhythmic (Fig.
8D). However, in 7 of
16 preparations the C2 firing pattern continued to display some
rhythmicity 20 hr or more after 5-HTP exposure (Fig. 7B). In
those cases, the periodic hyperpolarizations corresponding to the
ventral flexion phase of the motor pattern were greatly reduced. In
contrast to its effect on nerve-evoked DSI spike number, the number of
APs elicited in C2 was unchanged after 5-HTP treatment (Table 1).

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Figure 8.
The effects of 5-HTP emerge gradually even after
5-HTP washout. A, Before treatment, pedal nerve 3 stimulation (10 Hz, 1 sec at arrowhead) elicited a swim
motor program consisting of three dorsal flexion cycles.
B, Thirty minutes after the start of 2 mM
5-HTP, the DSI fired fewer APs per burst, whereas C2 firing was
unchanged. C, One hour after the end of a 30 min 5-HTP
application, the cycle-by-cycle DSI bursting was largely diminished,
but C2 bursting was still unchanged. D, By 20 hr after
5-HTP treatment, nerve-evoked output of the circuit was at its final
form. The DSI fired only a brief initial burst of APs in response to
nerve stimulation, whereas C2 exhibited a sustained period of intense
firing uninterrupted by hyperpolarizing periods. Recordings were
obtained in normal saline.
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We found that treatment with 5-HT (10
4
M) had an effect on subsequent nerve-evoked swim CPG
activity that was similar to that produced by treatment with 1-2
mM 5-HTP, including disruption of the rhythmicity of
nerve-evoked activity and the lack of DSI firing after an initial burst
(n = 2; data not shown). This pattern of activity may
be attributable to supplementation of neuronal 5-HT through uptake of
the exogenous 5-HT and release after subsequent stimulation.
The effects of 5-HTP emerge gradually
As might be expected for a synthesis precursor, the effects of
5-HTP on the motor program became more evident over time (Fig. 8).
After 30 min in the presence of 5-HTP, the DSIs continued to fire
action potentials on every cycle of the motor program (Fig.
8B), but the number of APs per burst decreased from
27.9 ± 4.8 under control conditions to 17.6 ± 4.4 (p = 0.03, paired t test;
n = 4). Within 1 hr after 5-HTP washout, the DSIs
generally fired only a single burst of APs in response to nerve
stimulation and then fell silent or participated minimally for the
remainder of the stimulated swim CPG output (Fig. 8C). The
DSIs continued to display this reduced activity in response to
nerve stimulation for at least 2 d after treatment (longer
times were not tested). Although the DSIs progressively decreased their
spike frequency and eventually ceased to burst, C2 bursting and the
length of the average swim CPG output were not noticeably affected
until many hours after 5-HTP washout (Table 1, Fig.
8D).
5-HTP treatment increases the size of electrochemically measured
signals evoked by nerve stimulation
As we have shown, 5-HTP treatment had competing effects: it
enhanced the synaptic and neuromodulatory potency of the DSIs and their
ability to evoke rhythmic activity from the circuit, yet it also
decreased DSI spiking activity during nerve-evoked CPG activation. This
raises the question of whether 5-HTP treatment changes the net amount
of 5-HT released in response to nerve stimulation. We used
microvoltammetry to measure the influence of 5-HTP pretreatment on the
electrochemical signal evoked by nerve stimulation. Oxidation and
reduction currents characteristic of 5-HT were recorded using Nafion-coated carbon fiber electrodes in response to nerve stimuli that
evoked swim motor programs. The carbon fiber was inserted into the
neuropil in a lateral region of the cerebral ganglion that putatively
contains DSI arborizations (Fig. 1C, arrows;
Getting et al., 1980
, their Fig. 1). Signals could be obtained only in restricted areas, presumably corresponding to sites of 5-HT release.
Pretreatment with 5-HTP increased the amplitude of nerve-stimulated
putative 5-HT overflow at these sites (Fig.
9). The average size of detectable
signals before 5-HTP pretreatment was 0.17 ± 0.05 ACU (see
Materials and Methods). This was significantly increased by 171% to
0.46 ± 0.07 ACU at those same sites after 5-HTP exposure (Table
1). These results are consistent with an increase in 5-HT release
induced by precursor pretreatment. Although the DSIs fired less, the
size of the putative 5-HT signal elicited by nerve stimulation was
greater. It is possible, therefore, that the signal originates from
activity of serotonergic neurons in addition to the DSIs.

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Figure 9.
5-HTP pretreatment increased the size of the
electrochemical signal recorded in response to nerve stimulation.
A. Before treatment, nerve stimulation (at
arrowhead) evoked a small change in the signal compared
to the prestimulus baseline (denoted by dotted line).
The concomitant swim CPG output, recorded in a DSI and a C2, is also
shown. B, The electrochemical signal recorded at the
same site was greatly enhanced 3 hr after 5-HTP treatment (2 mM, 30 min). The DSI fired a brief burst of APs in response
to nerve stimulation (at arrowhead) with minimal
participation in the ensuing CPG activity, although C2 fired strongly.
The electrochemical signal extends well beyond the end of
depolarization in C2. The electrochemical traces (light
trace) were digitally smoothed using a running average of 90 points to illustrate the slow changes (heavy trace).
Recordings were obtained in normal saline.
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The behavioral effects of 5-HTP injection
The effects of 5-HTP treatment on swim CPG activity in
Tritonia may represent an extreme example of the
"serotonin syndrome" induced in vertebrates by serotonergic drugs
that produce excessive 5-HT levels. Serotonin syndrome consists of a
variety of motor symptoms, including myoclonus, tremor, and rigidity in
mammals (Sternbach, 1991
; Jacobs and Fornal, 1997
). Observations of
intact Tritonia after 5-HTP injection (10 mg/100 gm body
weight) show a radical alteration in behavior presumably attributable
to an enhancement of 5-HT throughout the CNS and periphery. 5-HTP
injection, unlike control, vehicle injections, evoked periods of
prolonged dorsal flexion several hours after injection, and
subsequently interfered with swim production, reducing the intensity
and range of the dorsal flexion component of the swim, for a period of
2-3 d (n = 3; data not shown).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our findings illustrate that 5-HT supplementation by precursor
treatment can have unexpected results for neural circuit function and
interrupt motor pattern generation in the nervous system. Although
5-HTP pretreatment increased DSI potency in evoking synaptic and
neuromodulatory actions and in triggering prolonged bursting of other
CPG neurons, their spiking activity during swim circuit operation was
reduced to a single burst at the onset of the motor program. Despite
the massive reduction in DSI activity, the excitation of other cells in
the circuit, particularly C2, remained high, and a larger
electrochemical signal was recorded. Thus, more serotonin did not
result in a more robust motor program.
5-HTP enhancement of serotonergic actions
Treatment of the nervous system resulted in an increase in the
potency of DSI effects. The DSIs evoke fast and slow EPSPs as well as
neuromodulatory actions. Previous work suggested that these actions are
all mediated by 5-HT release (Katz and Frost, 1995b
). Enhancement of
these DSI-evoked effects by 5-HTP treatment is further evidence that
the DSIs release 5-HT.
The mechanism underlying the 5-HTP enhancement of DSI synaptic
potentials may yield insight into the serotonin release process. The
availability of releasable transmitter may play a role in the ability
of synapses to exhibit facilitation in other systems (Schlapfer et al.,
1974
; Katz et al., 1993
; Verhage et al., 1994
). In this system, 5-HTP
treatment did not significantly increase the size of single EPSPs
evoked by DSI, but it strongly enhanced the amount of synaptic
facilitation. This may indicate that basal release is not limited by
available 5-HT. In contrast, synaptic facilitation caused by residual
calcium buildup (Zucker, 1989
) may normally deplete the store of
readily releasable 5-HT and may thus be enhanced by increasing 5-HT synthesis.
Serotonin released from the DSIs can trigger the swim
motor program
The DSIs are the only known CPG neurons to receive synaptic input
from the escape swim command neuron, the DRI (Frost and Katz, 1996
).
Because this pathway initiates the swim response, DSI activation should
be sufficient to elicit the swim motor program. Previous work
established that 5-HT is necessary for swim motor program production,
because 5-HT antagonists block production of the swim (McClellan et
al., 1994
). Although application of exogenous 5-HT elicits a swim motor
program (McClellan et al., 1994
), it had not been previously shown that
the DSIs serve as a sufficient source of 5-HT to activate the swim
motor program.
The DSIs recruit strong inhibition onto themselves (Getting et al.,
1980
; Getting and Dekin, 1985
). Therefore, sustained depolarization of
one DSI inhibits the other DSIs, decreases firing in the depolarized cell, and does not evoke rhythmic activity. To circumvent recurrent inhibition, we drove APs in single DSIs with repetitive current pulses,
thus maintaining a constant firing rate. This evoked rhythmic activity
in other swim interneurons (including other DSIs) that resembled the
swim motor program in its periodicity, indicating that DSI activation
is sufficient to elicit the swim motor program. It should be noted that
although the DSIs were stimulated to fire tonically, they received
rhythmic synaptic feedback that might have gated their synaptic output
and transformed tonic firing into a rhythmic synaptic output.
After 5-HTP treatment, the ability of DSIs to elicit rhythmic activity
in swim interneurons was greatly enhanced. Instead of requiring
prolonged tonic spiking, a single burst of DSI spiking activity from a
brief depolarization often evoked sustained rhythmic firing in C2 and
other swim interneurons. During these bouts of activity, the DSIs were
silent or minimally active (Fig. 6B). Thus, serotonin
released from the DSIs may be sufficient to elicit rhythmic CPG activity.
Increased 5-HT release may change CPG activity
Over time, in 5-HTP-treated preparations, the DSIs became
progressively less active in response to nerve stimulation, eventually losing their rhythmic bursting pattern and firing just a single burst.
Although the DSIs ceased to fire in a bursting pattern, C2 continued to
burst almost normally in many cases.
The nerve-evoked burst of DSI spikes in 5-HTP-treated preparations,
although short-lived, may cause the prolonged spiking response of C2
and other neurons to nerve stimulation. As we showed, directly
depolarizing a single DSI had a comparable effect on swim CPG activity.
However, immunohistochemical data suggest that 5-HTP treatment
increases the 5-HT levels of all serotonergic neurons. Thus, it is
possible that spillover from serotonergic synapses not normally
involved in the swim circuit contributes to the prolonged nerve-evoked
response. Numerous serotonergic pedal neurons have axons in the nerve
stimulated to elicit the swim motor program and may be activated by
nerve stimulation. If spillover occurs, it indicates that participation
in a neuronal circuit can be changed by altering transmitter synthesis,
a novel concept for circuit organization.
The duration of CPG activation may reflect the time course of the 5-HT
bolus released from serotonergic neurons, including the DSIs, or it may
represent long-lasting actions of the 5-HT. The microvoltammetry
recordings support the former mechanism because they suggest that
extracellular 5-HT levels may be elevated for tens of seconds after
nerve stimulation in 5-HTP-treated preparations.
Feedback inhibition may underlie the loss of bursting in
the DSIs
The lack of ongoing DSI participation in the swim CPG output after
5-HTP treatment is likely attributable to enhanced negative feedback
from two sources (Fig. 1A). First, the DSIs recruit
inhibition onto themselves from a set of unidentified inhibitory
interneurons (Getting et al., 1980
; Getting and Dekin, 1985
; Getting,
1989b
). Enhanced DSI synaptic output may further recruit this
inhibitory input, leading to increased DSI inhibition. Second, the
connection from C2 to the DSIs is largely inhibitory (Getting, 1981
).
DSI-evoked neuromodulation increases the strength of this connection
(Katz and Frost, 1994
). Increasing 5-HT release from the DSIs should enhance C2 excitation and strengthen this inhibitory feedback connection.
Other serotonergic neurons exhibit functionally similar feedback
inhibition, although the mechanisms vary. Serotonergic neurons in the
lobster exhibit autoinhibition that is attributed to intrinsic properties of the cells and not actions of serotonin (Heinrich et al.,
1999
). In contrast, 5-HT release from dorsal raphe nucleus neurons is
inhibited by 5-HT autoreceptors (Gothert, 1990
; Sharp et al., 1997
;
Blier et al., 1998
; Corradetti et al., 1998
). We do not know if 5-HT
autoreceptors limit 5-HT release from the DSI terminals. However, 5-HT
directly excites isolated DSIs (Popova and Katz, 1998
), and the DSIs
monosynaptically excite each other in situ (Getting, 1981
),
suggesting that inhibition is produced by feedback from other cells.
5-HT augmentation and central pattern generation
Exogenously applied 5-HT and 5-HTP modulate GPG-generated rhythmic
activity, including locomotion, swimming, respiration, and chewing, in
many invertebrates and vertebrates (Willard, 1981
; Hashemzadeh-Gargari
and Friesen, 1989
; Kabotyanski et al., 1990
; Kabotyanskii and Sakharov,
1991
; Satterlie and Norekian, 1995
; Norekian and Satterlie, 1996
). The
effects of 5-HT on the leech swim-initiating interneuron, cell
204, is of special interest because 5-HT increases the ability
of cell 204 to elicit swimming in a manner similar to the effect of
5-HTP treatment on DSI potency. Normally, cell 204 must be depolarized
continuously to elicit sustained swimming, and the swimming ends soon
after stimulation of cell 204 is stopped (Debski and Friesen, 1986
). In
5-HT, brief depolarization of cell 204 is sufficient to elicit
sustained swim episodes, attributable in part to changes in the
electrical properties of cell 204 (Angstadt and Friesen, 1993a
,b
). It
is possible that 5-HTP treatment also alters the membrane properties of
DSI in Tritonia, possibly through long-term increases in
extracellular 5-HT levels.
Serotonergic modulation also plays an important role in regulating swim
activity in vertebrate species. Increased 5-HT levels reduce fictive
swim burst frequency and increase burst intensity in the lamprey
(Harris-Warrick and Cohen, 1985
; Christenson et al., 1989
), and 5-HTP
treatment restores swimming activity in eels treated with
para-chlorophenylalanine to reduce 5-HT levels (Genot et
al., 1984
). 5-HT and 5-HTP have modulatory effects on fictive
swimming in Rana temporaria and Xenopus laevis,
acting to increase burst duration and intensity while reducing cycle frequency and episode duration (Sillar et al., 1992
; Woolston et al.,
1994
).
5-HTP has different effects on the Tritonia swim CPG than
other systems heretofore described: 5-HTP treatment markedly alters the
swim CPG output rather than evoking swims or altering burst duration or
cycle frequency. This may be because 5-HT is an intrinsic neuromodulator in the Tritonia swim CPG. Because the
serotonergic DSIs normally participate in cycle-by-cycle pattern
generation by the CPG, it is likely that increasing the 5-HT content of
the DSIs and other serotonergic neurons upsets the balance of the circuit itself and disrupts pattern generation.
The effects of neurotransmitter supplementation on neuronal
circuit operation
The findings reported in this paper demonstrate the importance of
circuit interactions for predicting the effects of drugs that alter
transmitter content. As we have seen, increases in neurotransmitter
release from a neuron might be counterbalanced by decreases in the
activity of that neuron, possibly because of autoregulation.
Furthermore, system-wide changes in transmitter levels may cause
overflow from neighboring synapses and change the relative importance
of particular neurons, suggesting that the effective makeup of a
circuit can be artificially altered by increasing transmitter content.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 15, 1999; revised Dec. 6, 1999; accepted Dec. 7, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS35371.
We thank E. A. Kabotyanski for suggesting the use of 5-HTP and W. N. Frost for many helpful discussions. We thank S. L. Pallas,
R. M. Harris-Warrick, D. H. Edwards, and S. Clemens for
critiquing earlier versions of this manuscript and Ye Yang and Minhao
Zhou for assistance with the immunohistochemistry. We thank A. O. Dennis Willows and Friday Harbor Laboratories for help and support.
Correspondence should be addressed to David Fickbohm, 402 Kell Hall, 24 Peachtree Center Avenue, Atlanta, GA 30303. E-mail: biodjf{at}panther.gsu.edu.
 |
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