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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 2001, 21(5):1767-1778
Extrinsic Modulation and Motor Pattern Generation in a Feeding
Network: a Cellular Study
Volko A.
Straub and
Paul R.
Benjamin
Sussex Centre for Neuroscience, University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton, BN1 9QG, United Kingdom
 |
ABSTRACT |
Systems level studies have shown that the paired serotonergic
cerebral giant cells (CGCs) of gastropod mollusks have important extrinsic modulatory actions on the central pattern generator (CPG)
underlying rhythmic ingestion movements. Here we present the first
study that investigates the modulatory actions of the CGCs and their
released transmitter 5-HT on the CPG at the cellular level. In the
snail, Lymnaea, motoneurons such as the B4, B8, and B4CL
cells are part of the feeding CPG and receive serotonergic synaptic
inputs from CGCs. These motoneurons were used to investigate the effect
of serotonergic modulation on endogenous cellular properties of CPG
neurons. Cells were isolated from the intact nervous system, and their
properties were examined by pharmacological methods in cell culture.
Motoneurons were also grown in coculture with CGCs to compare 5-HT
effects with CGC stimulation. Three distinct modulatory effects of
exogenously applied 5-HT/CGC activity were seen: all three motoneuron
types were depolarized by 5-HT for prolonged periods leading to firing.
Conditional bursting accompanied this depolarization in the B4/B8
cells, but not in B4CL cells. The frequency of the bursting was
increased with increased CGC tonic firing. An increase in the size of
postinhibitory rebound (PIR) occurred with 5-HT application in all
three cell types, because of an increase in a CsCl-sensitive,
hyperpolarization-activated inward current. Similar modulatory effects
on membrane potential, endogenous bursting, and PIR properties could be
observed in the intact nervous system and were necessary for motoneuron
activation during feeding. Part of the systems gating and frequency
control functions of the CGCs appear to be caused by these modulatory effects on feeding motoneurons.
Key words:
Lymnaea; central pattern generator; neuromodulation; serotonin; conditional bursting; PIR; hyperpolarization-activated inward current; cell culture
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Investigations of neural circuits
underlying motor behavior have been particularly successful in the case
of central pattern generators (CPGs) (for review, see Orlovsky et al.,
1999
). One important principle that has emerged from the study of CPGs
is that their activity is not fixed but liable to modification by central chemical modulation. Both the endogenous cellular properties of
neurons may be affected and/or the strength of synaptic connections between component neurons of the CPG circuit. Central modulation can
arise from outside the immediate CPG circuit ("extrinsic
modulation") or results from the release of neuromodulatory
substances from constituent neurons of the CPG circuit itself
("intrinsic modulation"; Katz and Frost, 1996
).
Serotonin (5-HT) and other amines act as external modulators of CPGs in
a wide variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals (Harris-Warrick,
1988
), but for a fuller understanding of this type of modulation there
is a need for examples where the cellular actions of 5-HT can be linked
to the function of serotonergic neurons in a behavioral circuit. The
paired giant serotonergic neurons [metacerebral cells or cerebral
giant cells (CGCs)] in the feeding systems of gastropod mollusks are
an important example for this type of study because they provide the
sole serotonergic input to the feeding CPG, which simplifies the
correlation between cellular activity/5-HT action and behavioral
effects (Weiss and Kupfermann, 1976
; Pentreath et al., 1982
).
The role of CGC activity and 5-HT action in modulation has been most
extensively investigated in the neuromuscular system controlling the
feeding apparatus of the marine mollusk Aplysia (Weiss et
al., 1978
; Kupfermann and Weiss, 1981
), but the CGCs in this animal and
in another mollusk, Lymnaea, have additional important
modulatory effects on motor pattern generation via their effects on the
feeding CPG, including control of oscillator frequency and gating
(Rosen et al., 1989
; Yeoman et al., 1996
). However, these central
modulatory functions have so far only been analyzed at the circuit and
behavioral level (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
; Tuersley and McCrohan,
1989
; Yeoman et al., 1996
), without attempting to study 5-HT modulation
of the intrinsic cellular properties of individual neurons.
The synaptic connectivity of the Lymnaea feeding CPG is well
understood and is mainly composed of interneurons (for review, see
Brierley et al., 1997b
), but recently specific motoneuron types have
been shown to play an important role in pattern generation via their
electrotonic coupling to feeding CPG interneurons (Staras et al.,
1998
). These pattern-generating motoneurons are synaptic targets for
the modulatory serotonergic CGCs in Lymnaea (McCrohan and
Benjamin, 1980
), and their large size makes them an ideal model system
for our study. We show here that CGC activity and 5-HT application
significantly modulates the intrinsic properties of retraction phase
motoneurons necessary for their activation during feeding, causing
prolonged depolarizations of membrane potential, triggering a
conditional endogenous bursting property, and enhancing their
postinhibitory rebound (PIR) properties. Similar types of effects were
recorded in the intact ganglion, increasing significantly our
understanding of the modulatory role of CGC activity and 5-HT at the
circuit and behavioral levels.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Experimental subjects and chemicals. Adult specimens
of Lymnaea stagnalis were obtained from Blade Biological
(Kent, UK). The animals were kept in large holding tanks containing
copper-free water on a 12 hr light/dark cycle and fed lettuce three
times a week.
All chemicals were purchased from Sigma (Poole, UK) unless otherwise stated.
Dissection and intracellular recording techniques. All
dissections were performed in HEPES-buffered saline containing (in mM): NaCl (50), KCl (1.6),
MgCl2 (2), CaCl2 (3.5), and
HEPES (10), pH 7.9, in distilled water. The CNS, consisting of
the circumesophageal ganglionic ring (cerebral, pedal, pleural,
parietal, and visceral ganglia) and the buccal ganglia together with a
short stretch of esophagus, was isolated from the snail. The
preparation was pinned down in a Sylgard-coated dish filled with
HEPES-buffered saline with the dorsal surface facing up.
Standard intracellular recording techniques were used to record
simultaneously from up to four individual neurons. The recording electrodes were pulled from 2 mm glass capillaries with inner filament
(GC200F-15; Clarks Electromedical, Reading, UK) and filled with 4 M potassium acetate (electrode resistance, 30-50 M
).
Signals were fed into standard intracellular recording amplifiers,
digitized with a CED 1401plus interface (Cambridge Electronics Design,
Cambridge, UK), and visualized and stored on a personal computer (PC)
using Spike2 software (Cambridge Electronics Design). Penetration of neurons was facilitated by incubation of the isolated nervous system in
a protease solution (Sigma type XIV; 1 mg/ml in HEPES-buffered saline)
for 5 min. The protease treatment was stopped by extensively washing
the preparation with HEPES-buffered saline.
The effects of bath-applied 5-HT (0.1 mM, flow rate 3-4
ml/min) on retraction phase motoneurons in isolated buccal ganglia were
studied after the cerebral-buccal connectives were cut and the
circumesophageal ganglionic ring was removed from the recording chamber. Furthermore, the buccal ganglia were superfused constantly with tubocurarine (0.1 mM; d-TC) to eliminate
spontaneous and 5-HT-induced fictive feeding activity by blocking
cholinergic synaptic outputs from protraction phase interneurons such
as N1Ms and slow oscillator (SO) (Elliott and Kemenes, 1992
;
Yeoman et al., 1996
).
Identification and electrophysiological properties of neurons in
the intact nervous system. Extensive work on the feeding system of
the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis has led to the
identification of many of its components including motoneurons, CPG
interneurons and modulatory neurons, and the characterization of their
connectivity (Benjamin and Elliott, 1989
; Brierley et al., 1997b
). Most
of the larger motoneurons, among those the retraction phase motoneurons B4, B8, and B4CL used in this study, can be identified visually after
removal of the outer connective tissue. For example, B4, B8, and B4CL
neurons are found in characteristic positions in the medioposterior
quadrant of the buccal ganglia (Fig.
1A). These neurons form
an extensive network of electrotonically coupled neurons (Fig.
1C; Benjamin and Rose, 1979
). There are up to six B4CL
neurons in each buccal ganglion that fire together during the rasp
phase of the feeding cycle. The B4 and B8 neurons are pairs of (left
and right) individually identifiable swallow phase motoneurons, that
are strongly electrotonically coupled to each other and have similar
electrical properties (Benjamin and Rose, 1979
). The B4/B8 and B4CL
motoneurons all receive consecutive phases of inhibitory synaptic
inputs from the N1 and N2 CPG interneurons before they become activated
when the buccal mass is retracted, either late in the rasp phase (B4CL)
or at the start of the swallow phase (B4, B8) of the feeding cycle
(Fig. 1B).

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Figure 1.
Location, firing patterns, and synaptic
connectivity of retraction phase neurons in the buccal ganglia of
Lymnaea. A, Schematic dorsal view of the left buccal
ganglion showing the soma positions of B4, B8, and B4CL retraction
phase neurons. The position of the B1 and B2 neurons is shown for
reference purposes. The slow oscillator (SO) can be
located either in the left or right buccal ganglion between the B1 and
B2 neuron. cbc, Cerebrobuccal connective;
l/vbn, lateral/ventral buccal nerve; dbn,
dorsal buccal nerve; a, anterior; p,
posterior; l, lateral; m, medial.
B, Simultaneous recording from retraction phase
motoneurons B4CL, B4, and B8 in the isolated nervous system showing two
cycles of fictive feeding. The fictive feeding pattern was driven by
injection of a constant depolarizing current into the SO (top
trace). The three phases of the feeding pattern (P/N1
protraction, R/N2 rasp, and S/N3 swallow) are marked above and below
the traces. C, Schematic diagram of the known
connections between retraction phase motoneurons, feeding CPG
interneurons, and modulatory interneurons. Circles
indicate inhibitory synapses, bars indicate excitatory
synapses, and resistor symbols indicate electrotonic
coupling.
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The feeding CPG interneurons can be divided into three main types, N1,
N2, and N3. The N1 neurons are active during the protraction phase, N2
neurons during the rasp phase, and N3 neurons during the swallow phase
(Rose and Benjamin, 1979
, 1981a
,b
). Each of the three main classes
consists of at least two subtypes, medial N1 (N1M) and lateral N1 (N1L)
(Yeoman et al., 1995
), dorsal N2 (N2d) and ventral N2 (N2v) (Brierley
et al., 1997a
), phasic N3 (N3p) and tonic N3 (N3t) (Elliott and
Benjamin, 1985
). Both, N1 and N2 type feeding interneurons form
monosynaptic inhibitory connections with retraction phase motoneurons,
whereas N3 type interneurons provide an inhibitory chemical synaptic
input and are electrotonically coupled to the B4/B8, B4CL retraction
phase motoneurons (Fig. 1C; Staras et al., 1998
). It is via
these electrotonic connections that the retraction phase motoneurons
play a role in motor pattern generation with the B4/B8 and B4CL
motoneurons contributing significantly to the maintenance and phase
setting of the N3 phase CPG interneurons.
The serotonergic CGCs are a symmetrical pair of individually
identifiable giant neurons located in the anterior lobe of the cerebral
ganglia (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
). Left and right cells usually
fire synchronously in a continuous slow single-spiking pattern and this
enables them to be identified with certainty in the isolated brain
preparation. The CGCs have weak, mainly excitatory, chemical synaptic
connections with motoneurons (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
) and CPG
interneurons (Yeoman et al., 1996
). The synaptic responses can be
mimicked by application of 5-HT and blocked by 5-HT receptor
antagonists (Tuersley and McCrohan, 1989
; Yeoman et al., 1994a
).
Injection of 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine into intact snails reduced 5-HT
levels in the CGCs, and this reduced the proportion of snails
responding to natural food stimuli and/or the frequency of ingestion
(Kemenes et al., 1990
). Fine wire recording from the CGCs in the intact
snail combined with systems level pharmacological analysis (blocking of
5-HT receptors) suggested that the CGCs have a gating/permissive
function in the feeding system. A minimum level of tonic CGC firing
(~7 spikes/min) was required to support the food-driven consummatory
phase of feeding in the intact snail or in an SO-driven fictive feeding
rhythm in the isolated preparation (Yeoman et al., 1994a
). An
additional modulatory role in controlling the frequency of the feeding
pattern occurred in the 7-40 spikes/min CGC firing range (Yeoman et
al., 1994a
,b
). Although it is known that blocking 5-HT receptors in the
feeding network prevented the normal gating and frequency actions of
the CGCs, it is not known how these functions are implemented at the
cellular level.
Isolation and culture of identified neurons. The cell
culture procedure was modified from the protocol of Ridgway et al.
(1991)
. Media used included normal saline (NS), antibiotic saline
(ABS), defined medium (DM), and conditioned medium (CM). Normal saline used in cell culture experiments contained the same salt concentrations as the snail HEPES-buffered saline described above, but was made up in
culture grade water, whereas ABS also contained gentamycin (150 µg/ml). DM was prepared by mixing 100 ml of special L-15 medium (Life
Technologies, Paisley, UK), 80 ml of NS, and 120 ml of culture
grade water and by adding glutamine (30 mg), glucose (16.2 mg), and
gentamycin (600 µl of 10 mg/ml stock) to the solution. For CM
preparation, isolated brains that had been washed extensively in ABS
were incubated in DM (two brains per milliliter). After 3 d of
incubation, the CM was sterile-filtered (Millex-GV, 0.22 µm;
Millipore, Bedford, MA). Aliquots of CM (1 ml) were pipetted directly
onto culture dishes (Falcon 3001; Becton Dickinson, Rutherford, NJ)
coated with poly-L-lysine (15-30 kDa; 1 mg/ml in
15 mM Tris buffer), and equal amounts of DM were
added. The culture dishes were stored at
20°C and thawed 2-3 hr
before use.
The isolation of individual neurons was performed in a laminar flow
cabinet after the isolated nervous system had received one of two
alternative enzymatic treatments designed to soften the inner
connective tissue. The first type of enzyme treatment consisted of
incubation in trypsin (0.67 mg/ml) and collagenase/dispase (1.33 mg/ml;
Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) in DM for 30 min at room
temperature. This treatment was followed by 10 min incubation in
soybean trypsin inhibitor (1 mg/ml in DM).
For the second type of enzyme treatment, the isolated nervous system
was incubated for 45 min in a protease solution (Sigma type VIII; 1 mg/ml in NS) and then washed in ABS. In our experience, this treatment
facilitated the isolation of individual neurons with very long lengths
of primary neurites.
After either of the two enzyme treatments, the isolated nervous system
was pinned out in a dissection dish filled with high-osmolarity DM (30 mM glucose in DM). CGC, B4, B8, and B4CL neurons were
visually identified according to their size and characteristic position (see Identification and electrophysiological properties of neurons in
the intact nervous system). Their cell bodies were exposed by
mechanically disrupting the inner connective tissue and then removed,
together with their main processes, by gentle suction with a
fire-polished micropipette (tip diameter, 100-200 µm) prepared from
1.5 mm glass tubing (GC150T-10; Clark Electromedical Instruments) that
had been coated with Sigmacote. After isolation, neurons were
transferred onto culture dishes and cultured at 20°C from 1 to 5 d.
Electrophysiological and pharmacological studies on cultured
neurons. For intracellular recordings from isolated neurons, culture dishes containing either individual neurons or networks of
isolated neurons were placed on the stage of an inverted microscope (Nikon Diaphot) that was equipped with a custom-built, gravity-fed perfusion system. The culture dishes were perfused with NS at a flow
rate of 1-2 ml/min throughout the experiment. Cell bodies were impaled
with microelectrodes pulled from 1 mm capillaries (GC100F-10; Clark
Electromedical Instruments) and filled with saturated potassium sulfate
(tip resistance, 20-30 M
). The electrodes were manipulated with
three hydraulic manipulators (MW-3 and MO-300; Narishige, Tokyo, Japan)
mounted to the stage of the microscope that enabled the independent
control of up to three recording and/or perfusion pipettes. The
intracellular signals were amplified using Axoclamp2-B (Axon
Instruments, Foster City, CA) and Neurolog NL102 (Digitimer; Welwyn
Garden City, UK) amplifiers, output to a storage oscilloscope (5115 Tektronix), and stored on a DAT recorder (Biological DTR-1801;
Biological Science Instruments, Claix, France). Amplified signals were
also digitized using a DigiData 1200 interface (Axon Instruments) and
stored on a PC. Twin-electrode voltage clamp (TEVC) recordings of
single neurons were conducted using the Axoclamp2-B amplifier
controlled by pClamp6 software (Axon Instruments) via the DigiData 1200 interface.
The effects of 5-HT (0.1 mM) were tested by focal
application from a micropipette (1 sec pulses at 6-12 psi) using a
Picospritzer (General Valve, Fairfield, NJ) or by perfusing the
recording chamber with 5-HT solutions in NS (0.1-100
µM).
Statistical analysis of the data were performed using the SPSS software
package (version 8.0 for Windows; SPSS, Chicago, IL). Paired
t tests and one-way ANOVA procedures followed by post
hoc Tukey tests for multiple comparison were used when appropriate.
 |
RESULTS |
5-HT induces bursting in isolated retraction phase motoneurons
Three types of retractor motoneurons (B4CL, rasp phase; B4/B8,
swallow phase) contribute to motor pattern generation (Staras et al.,
1998
). We used these neurons as a model system to study the effect of
serotonergic modulation on their cellular properties, because previous
studies at the systems level have shown that 5-HT has important
modulatory effects on the feeding CPG. For this purpose, identified
neurons were isolated from the intact nervous system and cultured
individually or in pairs. All results on isolated neurons presented in
this study were obtained from neurons that were cultured for periods
between 1 and 5 d. Already after 1 d the neurons had
regenerated extensive processes. We found no evidence for any
consistent changes in the cellular properties of the isolated neurons
during the 5 d period in culture.
Individually cultured B4, B8, and B4CL cells usually displayed a
transient period of spontaneous activity after microelectrode impalement before becoming quiescent and settling at a stable membrane
potential. During the transition from activity to eventual silence,
approximately one-fifth of all cultured B4 and B8 swallow phase
motoneurons (33 of 151 and 8 of 37, respectively) showed patterns of
regular bursting activity (Fig.
2A). In contrast, B4CL
neurons (n = 84) never displayed regular bursting after
impalement but showed only a gradual decrease in firing frequency until
spontaneous activity ceased completely (Fig. 2A). In
some cases, B4CL neurons generated spike doublets or irregular changes
in firing frequency during this period of activity (data not shown).
However, these events were not superimposed on rhythmic oscillations of
the membrane potential that were observed in bursting B4 and B8
neurons. This observation indicated that B4 and B8 neurons, but not
B4CL neurons, possess some tendency toward endogenous bursting.

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Figure 2.
Activity patterns of isolated retraction phase
motoneurons in cell culture. A, Activity of isolated B4,
B8, and B4CL neurons after impalement with a microelectrode.
Arrowheads above the records indicate the time of
impalement. Note the transient periods of bursting activity in the B4
and B8, but not the B4CL neuron. B, Bath application of
5-HT (0.1 mM, 60 sec) caused prolonged depolarizations in
isolated B4, B8, and B4CL neurons that induced spiking activity. After
an initial period of tonic activity, 5-HT induced bursting activity in
the B4 and B8 neurons, but not the B4CL neuron, that lasted for >10
min. C, Simultaneous records from a pair of cocultured
B4 and B8 neurons that had formed a strong electrotonic connection.
Bath application of 5-HT (0.1 µM for 4 min) caused a
prolonged depolarization of both neurons that triggered spiking
activity first in the B8 and then the B4 neuron. After an initial
period of tonic activity, synchronized bursting occurred in both
neurons that lasted for >20 min after the start of the 5-HT
application. The three short records on the right illustrate
the electrotonic coupling between the two neurons and its ability to
synchronize activity in the two cells. Injection of a hyperpolarizing
current into the B4 neuron caused a similar, but smaller
hyperpolarization in the B8 neuron. Conversely, induced bursts of
activity in either of the two neurons evoked simultaneous bursts in the
other neuron. D, Simultaneous records from a pair of
cocultured B4 and B4CL neurons that had formed an electrotonic
connection. Bath application of 5-HT (1 µM for 45 sec)
caused a prolonged depolarization in both neurons that triggered
spiking activity in both neurons. The B4 neuron, but not the B4CL
neuron (despite its electrotonic connection to the B4 neuron) displayed
a period of bursting activity during the 5-HT-induced depolarization.
Negative current pulses injected into either of the two neurons evoked
similar, but weaker responses in the other neuron illustrating the
electrotonic coupling between the two neurons.
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Sustained bursting was induced more reliably in single B4 and B8
neurons by bath application of 5-HT (0.1 mM, 60 sec). The sustained bursting activity was superimposed on a prolonged
depolarization (Fig. 2B). Both the 5-HT-induced
depolarization and bursting activity could last for periods in excess
of 10 min, considerably outlasting the immediate period of application
even though the culture dish was continuously washed with normal
saline. All the B4 (n = 7) and B8 cells
(n = 8) tested showed some rhythmic oscillation of the
membrane potential in response to 5-HT. These endogenous bursting properties appeared to be conditional on the presence of 5-HT, because
they could not be induced in isolated B4 and B8 neurons by steady
current injection (n > 10 for both cell types; data not shown).
There was considerable variation between individual cells in the
duration of the bursts, with B4 or B8 bursts varying from a minimum of
~1 sec (e.g., Fig. 2B, B8) to >20 sec
(e.g., Fig. 2B, B4). Lower 5-HT concentrations
(0.1-10 µM) could also induce sustained
bursting (Fig. 2C,D), but were less reliable. When 5-HT was
bath-applied for up to 4 min to a cocultured pair of B4 and B8 neurons,
both cells were induced to burst with activity showing close synchrony
(Fig. 2C). The synchronization was probably caused by the
strong electrotonic connection that formed between them in cell culture
as indicated by the records showing that artificially depolarizing one
cell could induce a burst of spikes in the other (Fig. 2C,
right). The electrotonic coupling found in 75% of B4-B8 pairs in
culture (n = 8) recapitulates that recorded between B4 and B8 in the intact ganglion (Benjamin and Rose, 1979
).
Bath application of 5-HT (0.1 mM or 1 µM,
30-60 sec) to the B4CL cell type again elicited depolarizing responses
(10 of 13 tested). This induced prolonged tonic spike activity with the occasional occurrence of spike doublets, but unlike the B4/B8 cells,
never resulted in regular bursting (Fig. 2B). In the
example shown in Figure 2D, the B4CL neuron was
cocultured with a bursting B4 neuron, which had reformed an
electrotonic connection with the B4CL neuron similar to those found in
the intact nervous system (Benjamin and Rose, 1979
). Here, even in the
presence of a bursting B4 neuron, 5-HT failed to induce bursting in the
B4CL neuron.
A shorter 1 sec focal application of 5-HT (0.1 mM) could
also induce bursting in single isolated B4 (Fig.
3Ai) and B8 neurons (data not
shown), consistent with bath application. Again, this never occurred in
B4CL neurons (Fig. 3Aii; n = 25). The
proportion of B4 and B8 cells that responded to focally applied 5-HT by
bursting was much lower than with bath application. For instance,
5-HT-induced bursting only occurred in 21% of B4 neurons tested (7 of
33).

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Figure 3.
Responses of isolated B4 and B4CL neurons to 5-HT
pulses and bursts of CGC activity. Ai, A brief focal
application of 5-HT (10 µM, 1 sec) caused a prolonged
depolarization and bursting activity in an isolated B4 neuron that
lasted for >50 sec. Aii, An identical 5-HT application
to an isolated B4CL neuron evoked a strong, but shorter depolarization
that triggered a single burst of activity lasting for 20 sec.
B, Schematic diagram showing the monosynaptic excitatory
chemical synapses from CGC to B4 and B4CL neurons. C,
Simultaneous records from a pair of cocultured CGC and B4 neurons that
had reformed a chemical synapse in cell culture. Left
panel, Injection of a brief positive current pulse into the CGC
neuron directly triggered a burst of three CGC spikes. The burst of CGC
activity also elicited a longer-lasting depolarization in the B4 neuron
that caused four bursts of activity over a period of 30 sec.
Right panel, The B4 neuron was constantly depolarized by
injection of a weak positive current that induced tonic firing. A brief
burst of three CGC action potentials temporarily switched the B4
activity pattern from tonic to bursting before it reverted back to
tonic activity after ~25 sec. D, Simultaneous records
from a pair of cocultured CGC and B4CL neurons that had reformed a
chemical synapse in cell culture. A burst of CGC spikes induced by a
positive current pulse caused a substantial depolarization of the B4CL
neuron that triggered B4CL activity lasting for 22 sec. The B4CL neuron
generated spike doublets during this period of activity but showed no
pronounced bursting as observed in B4 neurons.
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Bursting in B4 is triggered by CGC activity
In the intact nervous system CGC neurons are the sole source of
serotonergic inputs to the retraction phase motoneurons and the feeding
CPG in general (Kemenes et al., 1989
). Their ability to mimic the
effects of 5-HT was tested in experiments in which they were cocultured
with B4/B4CL neurons. Chemical synapses were formed in ~50% of
CGC-B4 pairs (n = 35) and ~30% of CGC-B4CL pairs (n = 14).
Bursts of current-evoked spikes in the CGCs could induce sequences of
B4 bursting in silent B4 neurons or could change the activity of
tonically active B4 neurons into bursting. This is illustrated by the
example shown in Figure 3C (left panel) in which a brief burst of three CGC action potentials triggered a series
of five bursts of B4 action potentials over a period of ~30 sec, with
depolarization above the resting level maintained for the same period
of time. Tonic single spiking induced by injection of a constant small
positive current in the same B4 neuron could be switched temporarily to
bursting by a brief burst of CGC action potentials (Fig. 3C,
right panel). The observation that simple depolarization of
the B4 membrane potential induces only tonic activity, whereas CGC
activity can elicit bursting activity in the quiescent and tonically
active B4 neuron, supports our hypothesis that B4 bursting is
conditional and depends on the presence of CGC activity and 5-HT.
In B4CL neurons, CGC activity could also elicit a prolonged
depolarization and trigger activity in the B4CL neurons (Fig. 3D). This could be in the form of spike doublets, but the
B4CL neurons never showed prolonged bursts of activity superimposed on
pronounced membrane potential oscillations observed in the B4 neurons.
During feeding movements in the intact snail, the CGC neurons fire
tonically at an average rate of between 7 and 20 spikes/min, although
occasionally higher rates of up to 40 spikes/min have been recorded
(Yeoman et al., 1994a
). Related studies in the isolated nervous system
have shown that >7 spikes/min the CGCs exert a frequency control
function on the fictive feeding rate (Yeoman et al., 1996
). Here we
show that the rate of CGC activity can directly control the frequency
of B4 bursting in culture as well. For this purpose, activity in
isolated CGCs was set at various tonic levels within the physiological
range by current pulse injection, and the effects on the bursting of
cocultured B4 cells were systematically examined (n = 3). In the example shown in Figure 4 the
CGC effect on B4 bursting was tested at CGC firing rates from zero up
to 60 spikes/min for standard periods of 250 sec. Intervals in excess of 8 min were allowed between successive episodes of CGC stimulation, during which bursting in the B4 neuron returned to control levels.

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Figure 4.
Effects of CGC firing rates on B4 bursting in
cocultured CGC and B4 neurons that had reformed a chemical synapse in
cell culture. A, The top record shows the
spontaneous activity pattern of the B4 neuron in the absence of CGC
activity (CGC recording not shown). The subsequent three pairs of
records illustrate the changes in the activity pattern of the same B4
neuron, when the CGC neuron was stimulated at various frequencies (12, 24, and 60 pulses/min) by repetitive short superthreshold depolarizing
current pulses (200 msec) that triggered individual CGC spikes.
B-D, Quantitative analysis of the changes in B4
bursting induced by CGC activity at various frequencies shown in
A. The changes in frequency of B4 bursts
(B), B4 interburst intervals
(C), and B4 spike frequency during bursts were
determined for the last four B4 bursts during CGC stimulation compared
with the four B4 bursts before the start of each CGC stimulation (see
Results for further interpretation and details of statistical
analysis, *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001).
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In the absence of CGC spike activity, the cocultured B4 neuron still
generated periodic burst activity (control in Fig.
4A) caused by the residual effects of previous CGC
activity (e.g., spontaneous CGC activity after impalement, previous CGC
stimulation to test CGC-B4 synapse). Increasing CGC activity
progressively increased the frequency and strength of the spontaneous
B4 bursts (Fig. 4A). The results were analyzed
quantitatively by measuring the frequency of B4 bursts, the interburst
interval between B4 bursts, and the frequency of B4 spiking within the
four B4 bursts immediately before CGC stimulation (control) and
comparing their mean values with the same parameters measured for the
last four bursts of B4 activity during CGC stimulation (test). The
results for this cell are presented as difference scores (test minus
control) in Figure 4B-D. Paired t test
comparisons of the control versus the test values were performed for
statistical analysis. CGC stimulation at a rate of 12 spikes/min
increased significantly the B4 burst frequency by 0.5 ± 0.14 bursts/min on average (t test, p = 0.04; Fig. 4B). Stronger increases in the rate of CGC
firing to 24 spikes/min and 60 spikes/min had more substantial effects
on B4 bursting, increasing the mean burst frequency by 1.0 ± 0.17 bursts/min (t test, p = 0.01) and 1.6 ± 0.23 bursts/min (t test, p = 0.01), respectively. The increases in B4 burst frequency resulted mainly from
a significant decrease in length of the interburst intervals (t tests, p
0.01 for all three CGC firing
rates; Fig. 4C). Furthermore, it was also noted that the
frequency of B4 spiking within the bursts were increased significantly
when CGC activity was raised to 24 or 60 spikes/min, but not at 12 spikes/min (12 CGC spikes/min, t test, p = 0.12; 24 and 60 CGC spikes/min, t test, p = 0.001; Fig. 4D).
Further analysis using ANOVA tests revealed significant differences
between the effects that the three levels of CGC activity (12, 24, and
60 spikes/min) had on the B4 burst frequency, the B4 interburst
interval, and the B4 spike frequency within a burst (ANOVA:
F(2,9) values from 8.8 to 34.8, p values < 0.01 for all three B4 parameters measured).
Post hoc multiple comparisons using a Tukey honest
significant difference (HSD) test showed that the differences in
the B4 spike frequency changes within a burst were significant at the
5% level between all three levels of CGC activity (Tukey HSD test:
p values between 0.00 and 0.01). The same test showed that
the effect on the B4 interburst interval of 60 CGC spikes/min was
significantly different from those at 12 spikes/min (Tukey HSD test:
p = 0.002) and 24 spikes/min (Tukey HSD test: p = 0.04). Furthermore, the increases in B4 burst
frequency caused by 12 CGC spikes/min and 60 CGC spikes/min were
significantly different (Tukey HSD test: p = 0.006).
The data suggested that direct effects of CGC activity on the B4
motoneuron bursting frequency could be part of the modulatory mechanism
involved in feeding motor program control reported to occur in the
intact feeding system (Yeoman et al., 1994a
,b
).
Intrinsic PIR properties in retraction phase motoneurons are
enhanced by 5-HT and firing of the CGCs
Spike activity in B4, B8, and B4CL motoneurons during fictive
feeding is thought to be caused by PIR resulting from the N2 CPG
inhibitory synaptic inputs (Benjamin and Rose, 1979
; Fig. 1C). Here we show that the PIR mechanism in these neurons is
a target for modulation by 5-HT.
The presence of a basic PIR mechanism in the B4, B8, and B4CL
motoneurons could be demonstrated in cell culture by injecting hyperpolarizing current pulses and examining their rebound responses (Fig. 5A). However, the levels
of hyperpolarization that were usually required to elicit a PIR
response exceeded the amplitude of the normal physiological inhibitory
synaptic inputs encountered in the intact nervous system (Benjamin and
Rose, 1979
). The size of the PIR response in all three types of
motoneurons could be considerably enhanced by the application of 5-HT
to the isolated cells (Fig. 5B). Before 5-HT application,
the negative current pulses either failed to evoke, or only evoked
small rebound depolarizations. These were considerably increased after
brief focal applications of 5-HT (1 sec, 0.1 mM).
In the examples shown in Figure 5B, the effects were
particularly striking in the B8 cell in which enhanced PIR effects were
strong enough to evoke spikes 20 sec after exogenous 5-HT application,
and the PIR enhancement persisted for up to 80 sec.

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Figure 5.
PIR properties of isolated B4, B8, and B4CL
neurons in cell culture. A, Strong hyperpolarizing
responses in B4, B8, and B4CL neurons elicited depolarizing overshoots
after the end of the current pulses and evoked series of spikes in each
of the three neurons. Note the gradual recovery of the membrane
potential during the duration of the negative current pulse
(arrows) that was particularly strong in the B4 neuron
and somewhat weaker in the B8 and B4CL neurons shown. B,
The PIR properties in isolated B4, B8, and B4CL neurons were increased
by brief applications of 5-HT. The records on the left represent
controls before the application of 5-HT. Under these control conditions
negative current pulses only evoked a weak PIR response in the B8
neuron and no consistent response in the B4 and B4CL neuron shown.
Twenty seconds after the application of a brief 5-HT pulse (0.1 mM, 1 sec), the same test pulses evoked considerably
stronger PIR responses in all three neuron types and now triggered a
series of spikes in the B8 neuron. Eighty seconds after 5-HT
application the responses to the negative test pulses had returned to
control levels in the B4 and B4CL neuron, but were still slightly
elevated in the B8 neuron. Subsequently, the individual neurons were
artificially depolarized by injection of constant positive currents to
membrane potential values comparable with those obtained during 5-HT
depolarization. This artificial depolarization did not alter the
response of these neurons to the negative test pulses when compared
with the control records. C, Records from a CGC that had
reformed chemical synapses with a pair of cocultured B4 and B4CL
neurons. Before CGC stimulation, negative current pulses only evoked
weak PIR responses in both the B4 and B4CL neuron (left records). After
a 10 sec burst of CGC activity between test pulses, the same test
pulses elicited considerably stronger PIR responses that triggered a
single spike in the B4 neuron (middle records). Forty
seconds later the membrane potential and PIR response in the B4 neuron
were still slightly elevated, whereas they had returned to the control
levels in the B4CL neuron.
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Artificial depolarization of the membrane potential by positive current
injection to the same value as reached during 5-HT application did not
significantly affect the shape of responses to negative current pulses
(Fig. 5B, right side traces; n > 4 for all three cell types). This indicated that the modulation of the
endogenous PIR properties in these neurons was a direct effect of 5-HT
and not caused indirectly by the 5-HT-induced depolarization.
We predicted that 5-HT release from CGCs should have the same effects
on PIR in retraction phase motoneurons as focal application of 5-HT.
This was examined for B4 and B4CL neurons by coculturing the cells with
CGC neurons (CGC-B4, n = 6; CGC-B4CL, n = 3). A burst of CGC spikes applied just before PIR was evoked by
injection of a negative current pulse enhanced the size of the PIR for
both cell types (Fig. 5C), consistent with the release of
5-HT from the CGCs.
When a negative current pulse elicited a PIR depolarization after the
end of the pulse, the voltage trajectory during the pulse showed an
initial negative peak after which the membrane potential started to
slowly depolarize despite the continued current injection (Figs.
5A, arrows, 6A). We refer to this
depolarization as a "sag" potential (c.f. Arbas and Calabrese,
1987
; Angstadt and Friesen, 1993a
,b
; Zhang and Harris-Warrick, 1994
).
The existence of this sag was suggestive of the presence of a
hyperpolarization-activated inward current,
Ih, in retraction phase motoneurons.
Ih currents are typically activated
after hyperpolarization of the membrane beyond the resting potential
and show a high sensitivity to blockage by external
Cs+ ions (Pape, 1996
). We used this
sensitivity to Cs+ ions to obtain evidence
that the activation of an Ih current underlies the PIR properties in retraction phase motoneurons. In the
presence of CsCl, we showed that the PIR depolarization elicited by
constant negative current pulses in both B4 and B4CL neurons was
reduced significantly to 15 ± 7% (B4: t test,
p < 0.01; n = 3) and to 13 ± 9%
(B4CL: t test; p < 0.02; n = 3) compared with normal saline (Fig.
6A,B). CsCl also
abolished the sag potential response that occurred during negative
current pulses resulting in a considerable increase in the peak
amplitude of the hyperpolarizing membrane potential excursion (Fig.
6A). The CsCl block was reversed to ~80% of the
control value after washing with normal saline for ~5 min (Fig.
6B). The CsCl block of the sag potential response and
the PIR depolarization support the hypothesis that activation of an
Ih current is responsible for both of
these effects. However, without further characterization of the ionic
currents in these neurons that would go beyond the scope of the current
paper, we cannot exclude the possibility that some other CsCl-sensitive ion currents may also be involved.

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Figure 6.
Block of PIR by CsCl and effects of 5-HT
and CsCl on a hyperpolarization-activated inward current in B4 and B4CL
neurons. A, Current-clamp recordings from isolated B4
and B4CL neurons in cell culture showing a PIR depolarization in
response to 2 sec negative current pulses. The PIR depolarization as
well as the sag in membrane potential during the current pulse
were completely abolished by the addition of 5 mM CsCl to
the medium. The block of the sag resulted in an apparent increase in
input resistance. The addition of CsCl (5 mM) to the bath
medium also caused a hyperpolarization of the membrane potential that
was counteracted by injecting a constant positive current. The block
was readily reversed after removal of CsCl from the bath.
B, Summary of the data from three B4 and three B4CL
neurons. The histogram shows the mean peak PIR amplitude (+ SEM)
normalized to the peak PIR amplitude during the control period.
C, TEVC current recordings from isolated B4 and B4CL
neurons in cell culture. Under control conditions stepping the membrane
potential for 2 sec from the holding potential of 80 to 120 mV to
mimic the effects of negative current pulses that were used to elicit
PIR responses under current-clamp conditions caused an inward current
that gradually increased in amplitude. The inward current gave rise to
a weak slowly inactivating inward tail current when the holding
potential was stepped back to 80 mV. The amplitude of the tail
current in both B4 and B4CL neurons was significantly increased by the
bath application of 0.1 mM 5-HT (arrows).
Subsequent exchange of the bath medium for NS containing 5 mM CsCl completely abolished the tail current and
significantly reduced the current response during the potential step.
Replacing the bath medium with NS readily reversed the effect of CsCl.
D, Summary of the results for four B4 and five B4CL
neurons. The data are presented as mean values plus SEM.
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Under voltage-clamp conditions hyperpolarizing holding potential steps
induced a slowly activating inward current in isolated B4 and B4CL
neurons. The amplitude of the inward current was increased by 5-HT
(Fig. 6C, arrows) and strongly reduced by application of
CsCl (Fig. 6C). Before application of 5-HT, a 2 sec
square-wave step in holding potential from
80 to
120 mV evoked an
inward current that gradually increased in amplitude. When the membrane potential was stepped back to
80 mV, a weak slowly inactivating inward tail current was recorded. The application of 5-HT
increased significantly the amplitude of this tail current by
approximately doubling it in both B4 and B4CL neurons (B4: t
test control vs 5-HT, p < 0.05, n = 4; B4CL: t test control vs
5-HT, p < 0.05, n = 5; Fig. 6D). Subsequent exchange of the bath medium for
a saline solution containing 5 mM CsCl strongly
reduced or completely abolished the 5-HT enhanced tail currents in B4
and B4CL neurons to values that were not significantly different from
zero (one sample t tests: B4: p = 0.36, n = 4; B4CL: p = 0.95, n = 5; Fig. 6D). Furthermore, this
reduction was significant when compared with the 5-HT-enhanced tail
currents (B4: t test 5-HT vs CsCl,
p < 0.01, n = 4; B4CL: t
test 5-HT vs CsCl, p < 0.05, n = 5). The CsCl block of the tail current was
reversible when the bath medium was exchanged for normal saline.
Approximately 15 min into the wash the amplitudes of the tail currents
in B4 and B4CL neurons were reduced compared with the situation during
5-HT application but still enhanced compared with the original control
values. The reduction in the tail current amplitude after wash compared
with the presence of 5-HT was only just significant for B4 neurons
(t test 5-HT vs wash: p = 0.05, n = 4) and not significant
for B4CL neurons (t test control vs
wash: p = 0.49, n = 5). In
contrast, the elevation of the tail currents after wash compared with
control values was significant for the B4CL neurons (t test
control vs wash: p < 0.01, n = 5), but not for the B4 neurons (t test
control vs wash: p = 0.12, n = 4). One possible explanation for the elevated
washout response is that there may have been long-lasting residual
effects from the 5-HT application, which became effective again after CsCl application had ceased. This is consistent with the long duration
of the modulatory 5-HT effects on the membrane potential and endogenous
bursting properties (Fig. 2).
5-HT and CGCs effects on motoneurons in the intact
nervous system
Experiments on the retraction phase motoneurons in cell culture
allowed the effects of 5-HT and CGC activity to be examined directly.
However, it was important to show similar effects on motoneuron
cellular properties in the buccal ganglion circuit to obtain evidence
that these effects could contribute to pattern generation in the intact
system and were not artifacts resulting from the culture system.
The effect of CGC firing frequency on the B4 PIR property was studied
by recording simultaneously from both neurons in the isolated ganglia,
while manipulating steady CGC activity (n = 3). When
spontaneous CGC activity had ceased, which usually occurred in the
isolated nervous system 60-90 min after initial impalement, repolarization at the end of the negative current pulses failed to
reveal any consistent PIR depolarization in B4 neurons (Fig. 7A). However, when the CGC
firing was reactivated subsequently by current injection, PIR
depolarization could be elicited immediately in B4 neurons, and this
progressively increased in amplitude with increasing CGC firing rates
leading to the generation of B4 activity (0-60 spikes/min; Fig.
7A,B). The strongest changes in PIR amplitude occurred at
CGC firing rates between zero and 12 spikes/min (Fig. 7B).
These rates are within the normal CGC firing range recorded by fine
wires in the intact snail during food-stimulated feeding (Yeoman et
al., 1994a
). An ANOVA showed that significant differences existed between the B4 PIR amplitude at the CGC firing rates tested (ANOVA: F(5,23) = 4.49, p < 0.01). A post hoc Tukey HSD test for multiple comparison revealed significant differences between the PIR
amplitude at 60 CGC spikes/min compared with 0 spikes/min (p < 0.05) or 6 spikes/min (p < 0.05).

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Figure 7.
CGC and 5-HT effects on B4 neurons in the
intact nervous system. A, Modulatory effect of CGC
frequency on B4 PIR property. Sample records from a B4 neuron that was
recorded simultaneously with a CGC neuron (data not shown). When the
CGC was inactive, negative current pulses (2 sec, 3 nA) injected into
the B4 neuron caused a square wave hyperpolarization of the membrane
potential that returned rapidly to the resting potential after the end
of the current injection, without the generation of a consistent PIR
depolarization (left record). At 6 CGC spikes/min a weak
PIR depolarization can be seen on the B4 record in response to the same
negative current pulse (middle record). When the CGC
frequency was raised to values of 12 spikes/min, the B4 PIR
depolarization increased considerably in amplitude sufficient to
trigger a burst of axonal spikes (right record).
B, Mean peak B4 PIR amplitude (+ SEM) recorded in three
preparations in response to constant negative current pulses ( 3 nA, 2 sec) at CGC frequencies ranging from 0-60 spikes/min (see Results for
statistical analysis). C, Effect of 5-HT application on
B4 PIR in isolated buccal ganglia. Record from a B4 neuron after buccal
ganglia were separated from the rest of the nervous system by cutting
the cerebrobuccal connectives. The isolated buccal ganglia were
constantly perfused with d-TC (0.1 mM) to block cholinergic
synapses and suppress fictive feeding activity. Under these conditions
negative current pulses ( 3 nA, 2 sec) failed to elicit a PIR
depolarization (left record), comparable with the
situation in records A in the absence of CGC activity.
After the bath application of 5-HT, identical current pulses caused a
significant PIR depolarization that triggered the generation of action
potentials (middle record). 5-HT also caused a direct
depolarization of the membrane potential that was readjusted to control
levels by the injection of a constant negative current. The enhancement
of the B4 PIR property was reversed after washout of 5-HT for periods
in excess of 10 min (right record). D,
Mean peak PIR amplitude (± SEM) recorded in six B4 neurons in isolated
buccal ganglia in response to negative current pulses ( 3 nA, 2 sec)
in the absence and presence of 5-HT (0.1 mM).
E, Simultaneous records from a B4 and B8 neuron in the
intact nervous system. The preparation, as in the previous records, was
constantly perfused with d-TC (0.1 mM). Bath application of
5-HT (0.1 mM, 20 sec) caused a prolonged depolarization in
both neurons that evoked strong activity first in the B8 and then also
in the B4 neuron. After ~60 sec 5-HT-induced activity in these
neurons turned from tonic to rhythmic bursting. At the start of the
5-HT application, 5-HT appeared to trigger a single isolated rasp phase
CPG input (marked R) but without activating a sequence of
rhythmic inputs as would be expected during CPG-driven fictive
feeding.
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The effect of CGC activity on the B4 PIR amplitude was mimicked by bath
application of 5-HT to isolated buccal ganglia. For these experiments,
synaptic connections between the CGC neurons and the feeding system
were severed by cutting the cerebrobuccal connectives to remove
as far as possible any effects resulting from CGC activity.
Furthermore, the isolated buccal ganglia were bathed in tubocurarine to
eliminate spontaneous and 5-HT-induced fictive feeding activity by
blocking cholinergic synaptic connections from protraction phase
interneurons such as N1Ms and SO (Elliott and Kemenes, 1992
; Yeoman et
al., 1996
). Under these conditions, the injection of negative current
pulses (
3 nA, 2 sec at 30 sec intervals) only elicited a weak PIR
response in all B4 neurons tested (0.52 ± 0.16 mV,
n = 6; Fig. 7C,D) comparable with the previous results, observed in the absence of CGC activity (compare Fig.
7, B, D). Bath application of 5-HT (0.1 mM, 45 sec) increased the PIR amplitude fivefold
to 2.49 ± 0.36 mV (n = 6; t
testcontrol vs 5-HT, p = 0.001; Fig. 7D), which was sufficient to trigger axonal and soma spikes in B4 neurons (Fig. 7C). The direct
depolarization of the B4 membrane potential by 5-HT was prevented by
the injection of a constant negative current. Thus, the membrane
potential was kept close to the value before 5-HT application. The
enhancement of the PIR amplitude reversed gradually after removal of
5-HT from the bath, but even after 5 min of washing with normal saline the mean PIR amplitude was still almost double the control value (0.98 ± 0.28 mV, n = 6; t
testcontrol vs wash, p = 0.11;
Fig. 7D). It was impossible to directly
test the effects of manipulating CGC firing on "endogenous"
rhythmic burst activity in B4/B8 motoneurons, because this always
generates indirect synaptic inputs to the motoneurons via CGC effects
on CPG interneurons (Yeoman et al., 1994a
). Therefore experiments
concentrated on examining the effects of 5-HT on the bursting
properties of the motoneurons. As in the previous pharmacological
experiments, the buccal ganglia were isolated from the rest of the
nervous system by cutting the cerebrobuccal connectives and the
preparation bathed in tubocurarine to reduce spontaneous synaptic
inputs. Under these conditions, 5-HT (0.1 mM, 20 sec)
caused a prolonged depolarization in co-recorded B4 and B8 neurons
(n > 6; Fig. 7E). The depolarization outlasted the 5-HT application and triggered sustained activity in both
B4 and B8 neurons that turned into coordinated bursting activity after
~1 min. Although there were occasional instances of N2 CPG inputs
(usually one or two at the start of the 5-HT application, one labeled R
in Fig. 7E), there was no evidence for a rhythmic synaptic
input that could account for the bursting activity pattern observed in
the B4/B8 pair. We therefore conclude that 5-HT was capable of
activating endogenous bursting in the B4/B8 motoneurons.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have shown for the first time that the CGCs and their main
transmitter, 5-HT, modulate the intrinsic properties of three types of
retraction phase motoneurons in the molluscan feeding system. These
B4/B8, swallow phase and B4CL, rasp phase motoneurons are part of the
feeding CPG and influence rhythmic motor activity via their
electrotonic coupling to CPG interneurons (Staras et al., 1998
). All
three cell types contribute significantly to the maintenance and phase
setting of the feeding rhythm, and so the effects of the serotonergic
modulation on their activity are significant in understanding the role
of external modulation in the whole feeding circuit. Previous work has
emphasized the behavioral (Yeoman et al., 1994a
) and circuit level
control of the feeding system by the CGC/5-HT (Yeoman et al., 1994b
,
1996
) and had shown that 5-HT mediated the CGCs synaptic effects on B4
motoneurons using a variety of antagonists (Tuersley and McCrohan,
1989
). Here we show that the cellular properties of the motoneurons are
influenced by 5-HT modulation, allowing us to link together the
cellular and systems levels of analysis to produce a more complete
understanding of feeding motor pattern generation.
Modulation of PIR
Firing in B4/B8/B4CL neurons during fictive feeding, examined in
previous studies in the intact ganglion, was mainly caused by PIR
(Benjamin and Rose, 1979
). PIR was triggered by periodic inhibitory
synaptic inputs from the N2 CPG interneurons (Fig. 1B). However, recordings from isolated motoneurons in
culture showed that PIR effects were very weak unless either 5-HT was present or spike activity from cocultured CGCs was evoked. This suggested that 5-HT modulation via release from the CGCs was necessary for the normal activation of the motoneurons by PIR. Two types of
experiments, manipulating CGC spike activity and applying 5-HT, confirmed this in the intact ganglion. In the absence of CGC activity (zero firing rate), PIR was very small or absent. Consistent PIR was
observed only when the CGCs fired in their usual tonic manner. There
was a progressive increase in the amplitude of the PIR-induced depolarization with increases in CGC firing rates, and this was particularly obvious in the 0-12 spike firing range, corresponding to
the rates of firing in the CGCs that are required for food-induced feeding in the intact snail (fine wire recordings; Yeoman et al., 1994a
). The modulatory effects of the CGCs on the intact
Lymnaea feeding system are caused by its transmitter, 5-HT
(pharmacological experiments in Yeoman et al., 1994a
), so it was
significant that application of 5-HT increased the strength of PIR in
the intact ganglion. This consistently led to firing in response to a
hyperpolarizing pulse (Fig. 7C).
Enhancement of PIR properties by 5-HT has also been described in CPG
systems in a variety of invertebrates and vertebrates (Angstadt and
Friesen, 1993a
,b
; Gasparini and DiFrancesco, 1999
). We have shown here
that the modulation of a CsCl-sensitive, hyperpolarization-activated inward current appears to underlie the PIR enhancement. Similar currents (labeled Ih) have been
studied in a large number of systems, including the DG neurons of the
crab (Kiehn and Harris-Warrick, 1992
) and leech swim and heart
motoneurons (Mangan et al., 1994
; Olsen and Calabrese, 1996
). As in
these other systems, the Lymnaea current was slow to
inactivate, contributing to the formation of a depolarizing overshoot
after the end of the hyperpolarizing current pulse. A corresponding
"tail current", recorded under voltage clamp, is the slowly
inactivating component of the hyperpolarization-activated inward
current responsible for the depolarization. The amplitude of this
current and the corresponding tail current were increased by 5-HT.
Long-term modulation of membrane potential
Changing membrane potential is another way to modulate neuronal
activity in CPG neurons (Flamm and Harris-Warrick, 1986a
,b
), which
occurred in all three types of Lymnaea motoneurons with the
application of 5-HT. Previous experiments on the intact ganglion had
shown that the CGCs spikes could generate 1:1 slow 3-4 sec duration
EPSPs in the B4/B4CL cells (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
) that were
mediated by 5-HT (Tuersley and McCrohan, 1989
). The present experiments
showed that 5-HT could have much longer-term modulatory effects on
neuronal activity that lasted for many minutes.
In isolated cells, a 1 min bath application of 0.1 mM 5-HT
induced spike activity lasting for >10 min. This could not be
attributable to persistent 5-HT in the experimental chamber because the
continuous perfusion of normal saline washed out drugs within a few
seconds. Similarly, shorter duration focal application of 5-HT also
produced long-lasting effects on the B4/B8 and B4CL neurons. It clearly implies that membrane conductances are being affected for long periods,
presumably via G-protein-coupled receptor second messenger mechanisms.
cAMP-dependent Na+ currents exist
in Lymnaea B4 motoneurons and in the homologous Helisoma B19 neurons, where they are activated by 5-HT
(McCrohan and Gillette, 1988
; Price and Goldberg, 1993
).
Similar long-term depolarizing effects occurred in the intact ganglion
(Fig. 7E) and could provide an explanation for the ability
of the CGCs to drive B4/B4CL neurons into rhythmic spike activity
against a background of weak CPG synaptic input (Benjamin et al.,
1981
). Also a single burst of CGC activity can generate bursts of
motoneuron activity that can far outlast the period of immediate CGC
spike activity (Benjamin and Elliott, 1989
).
Conditional bursting
The bursting activity of pattern generator neurons is often
dependent on the presence of neuromodulators, and these "conditional bursters" are commonly found in CPG circuits (Harris-Warrick and Marder, 1991
). Application of 5-HT to the B4/B8 neurons, both in
culture and the intact ganglion, showed that Lymnaea
motoneurons have a conditional bursting property that coincided with
the 5-HT-induced depolarization. Simply depolarizing quiescent B4 or B8
motoneurons by current injection was not sufficient to produce
bursting, so more complex conductance changes must be involved. When
cocultured B4/B8 neurons reformed their normal electrotonic junction in
culture, both cells burst in synchrony. This is the first clear
demonstration of conditional bursting properties in the
Lymnaea feeding circuit and it presumably contributes to
B4/B8 bursting that is initiated by PIR. The more numerous B4CL neurons
do not show bursting in response to 5-HT, and their responses are
restricted to changes in membrane potential.
Role of extrinsic modulation in the feeding network: a contribution
to the systems level analysis
We believe that the ability of 5-HT/CGC activity to modulate the
intrinsic properties of the B4/B8/B4CL neurons in culture and the
intact circuit has functional implications for the intact feeding
circuit in both gating and frequency control.
Gating control
A simple mechanism for gating has been postulated in which the
CGCs provide a background of excitation to the feeding network, which
lowers the threshold for activation of the feeding CPG by food (Yeoman
et al., 1996
). CGC synaptic effects on feeding interneurons are indeed
mainly excitatory, and although weak have significant effects on the
spiking activity of individual cells (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
;
Yeoman et al., 1996
). It now appears that the activity of feeding
motoneurons is also significant in gating of the CPG because removal of
motoneuron activity reduces or completely prevents CPG activation in
SO-driven fictive feeding patterns (Staras et al., 1998
). This
indicates that any modulatory effects that increase the level of
motoneuron firing will contribute to the gating function of the CGCs.
The CGCs were previously thought to make a minor contribution to the
activation of B4/B8/B4CL cells by providing a weak synaptic
depolarization (McCrohan and Benjamin, 1980
). Here we show that CGCs
and their main transmitter, 5-HT, have much more significant excitatory
effects than previously thought via effects on the intrinsic properties
of the motoneurons including long-lasting depolarization, conditional
bursting, and enhancement of PIR (see above). All three modulatory
effects increase the probability of activity in the retraction phase
motoneurons and therefore are likely to contribute to the gating
function of the CGCs. The long duration of some of these modulatory
effects can explain why the CGCs have such long-lasting modulatory
effects on gating in the intact circuit (Yeoman et al., 1994a
).
Frequency control
Increasing the mean firing rate of the CGCs from 0 to 40 spikes/min in the intact nervous system produced a linear increase in
the frequency of the fictive feeding rhythm that was mainly attributable to a reduction in the duration of the N1/protraction phase
of the feeding rhythm (Yeoman et al., 1996
). This was thought to be
caused mainly by the CGCs exciting the N1Ms by direct and indirect
synaptic pathways, leading subsequently to the more rapid transition
from the N1 (protraction) to the N2 (retraction) phase (Yeoman et al.,
1996
). Here we have shown that CGCs can modulate directly the frequency
of B4 endogenous bursting activity (Fig. 4), which could contribute to
feeding frequency modulation in the intact network. Increasing CGC
firing rates in culture within their physiological range increased the
frequency of B4 bursting by mainly decreasing their interburst
interval, with lesser effects on burst duration. This was consistent
with data in the intact circuit where the CGCs increased the fictive
feeding frequency without affecting the duration of the retraction
phases of the feeding cycle.
Network assembly
In more general terms, CGC/5-HT modulation of B4/B8 and B4CL
neurons appears to be essential in configuring the retraction phase
components of the whole pattern-generating network, and its function in
the feeding pattern generating system appears to go beyond the simple
excitation of individual neurons and extends to the functional assembly
of the whole system. This resembles the situation in other
pattern-generating systems, in particular the stomatogastric system,
where various modulatory neurons can assemble distinct networks that
produce unique activity patterns (Meyrand et al., 1994
; Blitz et al.,
1999
).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 26, 2000; revised Dec. 14, 2000; accepted Dec. 19, 2000.
V.A.S. was supported by a grant from the Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz
Foundation, and V.A.S. and P.R.B. were supported by a grant from the
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.
Correspondence should be addressed to V. A. Straub, Sussex Centre
for Neuroscience, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9QG, UK.
E-mail: V.Straub{at}sussex.ac.uk.
 |
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