The Journal of Neuroscience, July 30, 2003, 23(17):6866-6875
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Axonal Dopamine Receptors Activate Peripheral Spike Initiation in a Stomatogastric Motor Neuron
Dirk Bucher,
Vatsala Thirumalai, and
Eve Marder
Volen Center and Biology Department, Brandeis University, Waltham,
Massachusetts 02454-9110
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Abstract
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We studied the effects of dopamine on the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of
the lobster, Homarus americanus. The two pyloric dilator (PD) neurons
are active in the pyloric rhythm, have somata in the STG, and send axons many
centimeters to innervate muscles of the stomach. Dopamine application to the
stomatogastric nervous system when the PD neurons were rhythmically active
evoked additional action potentials during the PD neuron interburst intervals.
These action potentials were peripherally generated at a region between the
STG and the first bilateral branch,
1 cm away from the STG, and traveled
antidromically to the neuropil and orthodromically to the pyloric dilator
muscles. Focal applications of dopamine to the nerves showed that spikes could
be initiated in almost the entire peripheral axon of the PD neurons. Dopamine
also evoked spikes in isolated peripheral axons. The concentration threshold
for peripheral spike initiation was at or below 10-9
M dopamine. Thus, the peripheral axon can play an important role in
shaping the output signaling to the muscles by the motor neuron.
Key words: crustacean; Homarus americanus; antidromic spikes; backpropagation; stomatogastric ganglion; neuromodulation; neurohormones
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Introduction
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The sole function commonly ascribed to axons is the conduction of action
potentials between physically and electrotonically distant sites. Motor neuron
axons usually faithfully transmit action potentials from a somatic/dendritic
integration site to a distant muscle target. Most axons are thought to have a
relatively simple complement of voltage-activated currents
(Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952
;
Connor et al., 1977
), those
minimally required for action potential propagation. Nonetheless, there are
examples of motor axons that show more complex intrinsic properties. In the
cat soleus nerve, a post-tetanic single stimulus can induce repetitive firing
that is generated close to the terminals of the motor neuron axons and is
thought to be the cause of post-tetanic potentiation in the soleus muscle
(Standaert, 1963
,
1964
). In leech segmental
heart motor neurons, the peripheral axons are capable of producing bursts when
central activity is suppressed (Maranto
and Calabrese, 1983
). In the stick insect, a single leg motor axon
produces bursting when the leg is autotomized and the axon is severed from the
central part of the neuron (Bässler,
1984
; Schmidt and Grund,
2001
).
Synaptic release at axon terminals of crustacean neuromuscular junctions
can be modulated (Dudel,
1965
), and modulators can elicit spontaneous nerve terminal
activity (Grundfest and Reuben,
1961
), but apart from their terminals motor axons are not usually
thought to be chemosensitive. However, the lateral gastric (LG) motor neuron
in the crab stomatogastric ganglion (STG) has peripheral spike initiation
zones at a considerable distance from its target muscles that generate
prolonged tonic spiking in the presence of serotonin in response to centrally
generated bursts (Meyrand et al.,
1992
). In this case, the serotonin-sensitive peripheral
spike-initiation zone is close enough electrotonically to be under the control
of depolarization from the soma and primary neurites of the LG neuron in the
STG, and serotonin is thought to be released at specific sites in the nerve
from sensory terminals of muscle receptors.
The stomatogastric nervous system that controls movements of the stomach of
decapod crustaceans is modulated by a multitude of peptides, biogenic amines,
and conventional transmitters. These are either released from modulatory
terminals or from neurohemal organs into the hemolymph
(Marder, 1987
;
Harris-Warrick et al., 1992
;
Christie et al., 1995
;
Marder et al., 1995
;
Marder and Calabrese, 1996
;
Marder and Bucher, 2001
).
Among them, dopamine was one of the first neuromodulators described
(Kushner and Maynard, 1977
;
Barker et al., 1979
;
Kushner and Barker, 1983
;
Cournil et al., 1994
,
1995
). In H.
americanus dopamine is found in both defined neuronal projections to the
STG, as well as in the pericardial organs, the major neurosecretory organ that
provides hormonal modulation to the stomach and stomatogastric nervous system
(Sullivan, 1978
;
Pulver et al., 2003
).
We now show that in the lobster Homarus americanus hormonal
concentrations of dopamine act on the axons of the pyloric dilator (PD)
neurons to elicit spikes. These actions are different from the well
characterized effects dopamine has on the pyloric rhythm of the STG of the
spiny lobster, Panulirus interruptus (Ayali and Harris-Warrick,
1998
,
1999
;
Ayali et al., 1998
;
Harris-Warrick et al., 1998
;
Kloppenburg et al., 1999
,
2000
;
Peck et al., 2001
). These data
indicate that a neuromodulator or hormone can be sufficient to elicit spiking
in a large axonal region of a neuron, and this may play an integral role in
shaping the synaptic output of this neuron.
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Materials and Methods
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Adult Homarus americanus (n = 38) were obtained from
Commercial Lobster (Boston, MA) and kept in artificial seawater tanks at
11°C. Lobsters were anesthetized by keeping them on ice for 15 min before
dissection. The stomatogastric nervous system
(Fig. 1), consisting of the
paired commissural ganglia (CoGs), esophageal ganglion (OG), the STG, their
connectives and some of the motor nerves, was dissected and pinned out in a
transparent Sylgard-coated (Dow Corning, Midland, MI) dish containing chilled
(9-13°C) saline. The saline solution consisted of the following (in
mM): 479.12 NaCl, 12.74 KCl, 13.67 CaCl2, 20
MgSO4, 3.91 Na2SO4, and 5 HEPES, pH 7.45.

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Figure 1. The stomatogastric nervous system. The main axonal branching pattern for
one of the two PD neurons is shown on one side. The dlvn was always cut close
to its origin. Rings indicate sites of petroleum jelly wells. The well on the
stn was used to block impulse activity by the application of TTX/sucrose. The
well on the dvn was either used for extracellular recording or for blocking
impulse activity with TTX/sucrose. dvn, lvn, vlvn, and pdn wells were used for
the focal application of dopamine and for extracellular recording. pyn,
Pyloric nerve. Nomenclature after Maynard and Dando
(1974 ).
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Electrophysiological recordings and pharmacological applications.
For electrophysiological recordings, the STG was desheathed, and petroleum
jelly (Vaseline) wells were placed on the motor nerves. Extracellular
recordings from the nerves were made by placing stainless steel pin electrodes
in the wells. Signals were amplified and filtered using a differential AC
amplifier (A-M Systems, Carlsborg, WA). Intracellular recordings from the STG
motor neuron somata were made using 20-40 M
glass microelectrodes
filled with 0.6 M K2SO4 and 20 mM
KCl and an Axoclamp 2B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Pyloric
motor neurons were identified using standard procedures
(Selverston and Moulins,
1987
). When appropriate, the STG was isolated from descending
inputs from the CoGs and OG by blocking action potential conduction in the
stomatogastric nerve (stn) with 750 mM sucrose and 1
µM TTX in a petroleum jelly well on the stn. In some
experiments, the peripheral nerves were isolated from central activity by
blocking the dorsal ventricular nerve (dvn) close to the STG
(Fig. 1). During recordings,
the preparations were continuously superfused with chilled (12°C)
physiological saline, and dopamine (3-hydroxytyramine hydrochloride; Sigma,
St. Louis, MO) containing saline at indicated concentrations was introduced
into the bath using a switching manifold. Dopamine stock solutions were
freshly made and kept on ice for no longer than 1 hr to avoid degradation.
Data acquisition and analysis. Data were acquired using a Digidata
1200 data acquisition board (Axon Instruments) and subsequently converted and
analyzed in Spike2 (version 4; Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK)
using programs written in the Spike2 script language. Analyzed data were
plotted, and statistical tests were performed in Statview (version 5; SAS
Institute, Cary, NC). Final figure mounting was done in Canvas (version 8;
Deneba Systems, Miami, FL). Because the recording wells had inner diameters of
>1 mm, extracellularly recorded spikes have complex waveforms produced as
the spikes travel on the section of nerve in the well. Spike detection was
done either by simple voltage thresholding or by using the spike shape
template functions in Spike2. Changes in the cycle period of the pyloric
rhythm were analyzed. The cycle period was defined as the time from the first
spike in a burst of the PD neuron to the first spike in the next burst. In
some cases, there was too much tonic spiking activity to define bursts
reliably. In these cases, spikes in the intracellular recording trace of the
PD neuron were eliminated using a sliding average smoothing function in
Spike2; the cycle period was then determined from the time between peaks of
the slow-wave membrane oscillation of the PD neuron.
Data are presented here as plots of the cycle frequency (the inverse of the
cycle period). However, an inverse operation changes the variance of the
sample; therefore, paired t tests for statistical significance were
performed on the cycle periods. For quantification, cycle frequencies or
periods were always plotted first over time. Time stretches of several minutes
in which the range of values did not change visibly were assumed to represent
the steady state and were used to determine means.
Mean spike frequencies showed large variations between different
experiments. Therefore, nonparametric tests were used to establish statistical
difference (Spearman rank correlation test, Friedman test, and Wilcoxon signed
rank test, as indicated). In all cases, statistical significance was assumed
at p < 0.05. Statistical significance is indicated in bar plots by
asterisks (*p < 0.05; **p <
0.01).
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Results
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The pyloric rhythm is produced by a well characterized small group of
neurons in the STG (Selverston and
Moulins, 1987
; Harris-Warrick
et al., 1992
). The two PD neurons, together with the anterior
burster (AB) interneuron, form the pacemaker kernel of the pyloric rhythm. The
AB and PD neurons are electrically coupled and make inhibitory chemical
synapses onto a number of follower neurons, including the lateral pyloric (LP)
neuron and the pyloric (PY) neurons. Feedback from follower neurons to the
pacemaker kernel is restricted to an inhibitory chemical synapse from the LP
neuron to the PD neurons. The axonal branching pattern of one of the PD
neurons is depicted schematically in Figure
1 (Maynard and Dando,
1974
). The PD neuron somata are in the STG, and their axons exit
the ganglion via the unpaired dorsal ventricular nerve (dvn), before splitting
into the paired lateral ventricular nerves (lvns). The PD axons divide again
into both the ventral and the dorsal branches of the lvn (vlvn, dlvn) to
innervate two different sets of muscles. The dlvn leads to the anterior dorsal
pyloric dilator muscles, and the vlvn ends in the pyloric dilator nerve (pdn)
that innervates the ventral pyloric dilator muscles
(Maynard and Dando, 1974
). In
the experiments reported here, the dlvn branches were not retained during the
dissection, and PD neuron activity was monitored in recordings from the dvn,
lvn, vlvn and pdn.
Dopamine elicited tonic "extraburst" spiking in PD
neurons and increased the cycle frequency of the pyloric rhythm
In H. americanus, when the modulatory input from the CoGs and the
OG to the STG is removed by blocking impulse activity in the stn, the AB and
the two PD neurons continue to cycle at a low frequency, whereas the LP and PY
follower neurons fall silent (Thirumalai
and Marder, 2002
) (Fig.
2A). Intracellular recordings of the PD neurons show
slow-wave membrane oscillations with bursts of spikes during the depolarized
phase of the slow wave. Bath application of 10-6
M dopamine to the entire preparation elicited
"extraburst" spikes during the interburst interval in seven of
eight experiments (Fig.
2B-D). These spikes were not riding on top of any
apparent EPSPs. At the onset of this effect, the extraburst spikes appeared
late in the interburst interval (Fig.
2B). Later in dopamine application, extraburst spiking
had a regular tonic frequency throughout the interburst interval
(Fig. 2C). Still later
in dopamine application, the spike rate became regular and the slow-wave
membrane oscillation ceased or was significantly reduced
(Fig. 2D).

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Figure 2. Dopamine actions on the STG. Dopamine (10-6 M) was
bath-applied to the STG after modulatory inputs from the CoGs and the OG were
removed by blocking impulse activity in the stn with a TTX/sucrose well.
Simultaneous intracellular recordings from the soma of a PD neuron and the
lateral pyloric (LP) neuron are shown. A, Control saline. B,
Immediately after the onset of extraburst spiking in 10-6
M dopamine. Extraburst spikes were seen late in the interburst
interval. C, Two minutes in 10-6 M dopamine.
D, Ten minutes in 10-6 M dopamine. E,
Mean pyloric cycle frequencies for four preparations. The cycle frequency in
dopamine is significantly different from the control (p < 0.02,
paired t test). Data are means ± SD. F, Connectivity
diagram showing reciprocal inhibitory connections (filled circles) between PD
neurons and LP.
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In P. interruptus, the application of dopamine in preparations
with the stn blocked does not elicit extraburst spikes, but does have effects
on the frequency of the pyloric rhythm
(Flamm and Harris-Warrick,
1986a
; Ayali and
Harris-Warrick, 1999
). Figure
2 shows clearly that there were dramatic increases in the pyloric
rhythm frequency until these were overwhelmed by the burst suppression late in
dopamine applications. In four of the preparations, there was a long enough
time before the burst was suppressed to allow us to quantify burst frequency
from a comparatively stable data window. In these experiments, the increase in
cycle frequency was nearly threefold (Fig.
2E). It should be noted that this effect was at least
partly independent of the presence of extraburst spikes. The first extraburst
spike in the PD recording in Figure
2B is the actual first extraburst spike recorded in
response to the dopamine application. By that time, the cycle frequency had
already increased by a factor of
2.5.
The increased burst frequency seen in dopamine was accompanied by a small
depolarization of the PD neurons and a slight hyperpolarization of the LP
neuron (Fig. 2C,D).
Because these neurons release transmitter as a graded function of membrane
potential and are reciprocally inhibitory
(Fig. 2F)
(Russell and Graubard, 1987
;
Hartline and Graubard, 1992
),
it is not possible from these experiments alone to determine whether either or
both of the neurons is a direct target of the dopamine action.
These initial results led us to ask where the extraburst spikes were
generated. They appeared in soma recordings of the PD neurons without any
visible underlying depolarization, and at membrane potentials significantly
lower than the threshold for spike initiation seen in soma recordings for
burst-associated spikes. This suggested that the initiation site for
extraburst spikes could be far more distant from the soma than the one for
spikes that ride on top of the slow depolarizing waves.
Extraburst spikes are generated in the peripheral axons of PD
To determine the origin of extraburst spike activity, we placed petroleum
jelly wells on the peripheral motor nerves at different locations (as
indicated in Fig. 1),
bath-applied 10-6 M dopamine, and recorded
nerve activity simultaneously while recording intracellularly from the PD
neuron soma. Multiple sweeps of recording traces were triggered on the peak of
the intracellular somatic spike. These recordings show different propagation
delays for spikes during bursts and spikes during interburst intervals
(Fig. 3). Burst spikes
(Fig. 3A), which were
presumably generated in the STG neuropil, reached the upper dvn and the soma
at approximately the same time and traveled down the peripheral axons to the
pdn with a delay of 31-40 msec (34.3 ± 3.4 msec, n = 6) from
the peak of the spike in the intracellular soma recording. Extraburst spikes
(Fig. 3B) appeared
first in the dvn and reached the lvn earlier than the soma. The delay between
the spike in the soma and in the pdn was only 8-15 msec (11.8 ± 2.8
msec). These two delays were statistically different (paired t test,
p < 0.001), indicating different sites of spike initiation.

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Figure 3. Dopamine-evoked extraburst spikes are peripherally initiated. The peaks of
spikes in the intracellular soma recordings (vertical dashed line) were used
to trigger multiple sweeps of nerve recordings. A, Burst spikes
initiated in the STG reached the soma and the dvn at approximately the same
time and traveled with increasing delay down the lvn and vlvn to the pdn. The
mean delay ± SD between the soma and the pdn was 34.3 ± 3.4 msec
(n = 6). B, Extraburst spikes appeared first in the dvn,
then in the lvn, and then in the soma. The delay between dvn and lvn was much
shorter than in burst spikes, indicating a spike initiation zone between the
dvn and lvn recording sites. The mean delay between soma and pdn was 11.8
± 2.8 msec (n = 6). The delays in A and B
were statistically different (paired t test, p <
0.001).
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Where were the extraburst spikes initiated? The conduction delay between
upper dvn and lvn recording sites for these spikes was much shorter than for
spikes occurring during bursts. This indicates that the extraburst spikes were
generated peripherally, somewhere between the upper dvn and lvn, distal to the
dvn recording site and proximal to the lvn recording site. They traveled both
up to the STG, where they invaded the neuropil and soma antidromically, and
down toward the pdn. If similar spike conduction velocities in both directions
are assumed, the conduction delay between the two spike initiation sites can
be roughly calculated. Spikes generated in the periphery passed the dvn
recording site and invaded the soma
10 msec later. Because there was no
delay between the dvn recording site and the soma for spikes generated during
bursts, the delay between the central spike initiation site and the dvn was
5 msec. Centrally generated spikes passed the dvn and reached the lvn
20 msec later, whereas spikes generated between the dvn and the lvn also
reached the dvn first but the lvn only
7 msec later. The conduction time
between the dvn and the lvn for centrally generated spikes equals the sum of
the conduction times from the peripheral spike initiation site to both dvn and
lvn recording sites. The delay between the dvn and the lvn for peripherally
generated spikes equals the difference between the conduction times from the
peripheral spike initiation zone to the lvn and the peripheral spike
initiation zone to the dvn. Therefore, the peripherally generated spike needed
7 msec to reach the dvn recording site and the conduction delay between
central and peripheral spike initiation site was
12 msec.
Did spike extinction by the collision of orthodromic and antidromic spikes
alter the activity pattern of the PD neuron axons? The 12 msec delay between
central and peripheral spike initiation sites was much shorter than even the
minimal interspike intervals that we found during the application of
10-6 M dopamine for spikes during bursts
(
40 msec) and extraburst spikes (
100 msec). Therefore, the
probability for spike collisions was low, and roughly the same spike patterns
were conveyed to the soma and the muscles. In fact, pdn recordings showed a
very similar spike pattern compared with the soma (data not shown), but a
one-toone match of spikes was difficult because the pdn recordings contained
spikes generated by the axons of both PD neurons.
In experiments in which dopamine was bath-applied to the whole preparation
the site of the peripheral spike initiation invariably appeared to be in the
lower dvn (somewhere between the upper dvn and the upper lvn,
1 cm from
the STG). However, we also wanted to determine which sites of the peripheral
nerves were potentially capable of spike initiation in dopamine. Therefore, we
made small petroleum jelly wells (inside diameter,
1 mm) at multiple
sites along the nerves and used these to both record from those sites and to
apply high concentrations of dopamine (10-4 to
10-3 M) to these small sections of nerve.
Figure 4 shows results from one
of four experiments in which dopamine was sequentially applied to different
wells so that the site of dopamine sensitivity could be assessed. The traces
are averages of 100-500 sweeps triggered by the intracellular spikes. In these
experiments, dopamine applied to several wells was effective; in each case,
the site of spike initiation moved when the site of dopamine application was
changed. In all four experiments, dopamine applications to wells placed on any
portion of the lvn, vln, or dvn were effective in triggering spikes, although
wells on the pdn were not. The nerve name in boldface type
(Fig. 4) shows where the well
with the dopamine was placed. The spikes appeared first in the well containing
dopamine and then traveled antidromically toward the soma and orthodromically
toward the periphery.

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Figure 4. A large portion of the PD axon is dopamine-sensitive. Intracellular spikes
were used to trigger multiple sweeps of data; 100-500 sweeps were averaged.
Petroleum jelly wells were located as indicated in
Figure 1, except the dvn
recording site was more distal in this experiment. The site of dopamine
application is indicated in bold. A, Control. Spikes first reached
the soma and then the dvn, from which they traveled orthodromically down the
nerves toward the PD innervated muscles. B, 10-4
M dopamine applied to the vlvn well. C, 10-4
M dopamine applied to the lvn well. D, 10-4
M dopamine applied to the dvn well. Slight changes in the spike
waveform in the extracellular recordings were attributable to the repeated
exchange of fluid in the recording wells.
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Dopamine elicits spikes in peripheral PD axons at hormonal
concentrations
Tyrosine hydroxylase immunohistochemistry shows no staining in the
peripheral stomatogastric nerves (Pulver
et al., 2003
). This suggests that dopamine is not present in
terminals within the peripheral nerves and can reach the peripheral PD axons
only via the hemolymph, and at hormonal concentrations. Therefore, we also
wanted to determine if low concentrations of dopamine would be sufficient to
initiate spiking in the peripheral PD axons.
To simplify these experiments, we wished to study spike initiation in the
periphery in the absence of centrally generated spikes initiated in the STG.
Therefore, in 15 experiments we blocked spike conduction in the upper dvn with
a TTX/sucrose well, and recorded in control saline and in the presence of
dopamine at varying concentrations. Figure
5A shows an intracellular recording of the PD neuron
(upper trace), cycling at a normal frequency. With the dvn blocked, spikes
generated in the STG were not conducted to the periphery; therefore, they were
not seen in the pdn recording (lower trace). Instead, in the absence of
orthodromic spikes, the isolated PD axons in 8 of 15 experiments were
spontaneously active, either tonically (n = 2) or in irregular bursts
(n = 6). The mean overall spike frequency was 0.64 ± 0.49 Hz
(n = 8, ranging from 0.15 to 1.39 Hz) and the mean burst frequency
was 0.14 ± 0.12 Hz (n = 6, ranging from 0.03 to 0.32 Hz).

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Figure 5. Activity of isolated peripheral PD axons. A, TTX/sucrose in dvn
well, isolating the STG from the periphery. Under these conditions, central PD
neuron activity was uncoupled from the axons, which produced bursts of spikes
at a low and irregular frequency. B, First trace, control saline.
Both PD axons (which were easily distinguishable by different amplitude
spikes) exhibited low-frequency irregular bursting. Second trace, tonic
spiking in 10-9 M dopamine. Third trace, 10-6
M dopamine. Bottom two traces, The extracellular signal was sorted
to show the activity of the two PD axons separately. The smaller signal
appears to be bursting in the raw trace, but this is only because of shifting
intervals between the two different signals. The sorted traces reveal that
there is no rhythmic modulation of the spike frequency in either of the two PD
neuron axons. C, Increase in spike frequency in isolated peripheral
PD axons in low concentrations of dopamine. Dopamine application caused a
significant increase in spike frequency (n = 12; p <
0.01, Friedman test). Spike frequencies were significantly different between
control and 10-10 M dopamine (p < 0.05,
Wilcoxon signed rank test), control and 10-9M dopamine
(p < 0.01), and 10-10 M and 10-9
M dopamine (p < 0.01). Data are shown as means ±
SEM.
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In the top trace of Figure
5B, the two PD axon spikes can be distinguished by their
amplitudes in the pdn recording. They were both active, but no longer
synchronous, because their axons were spontaneously and independently bursting
in control saline. The second trace in
Figure 5B shows the
response to 10-9 M dopamine; both axons went
from slow bursts to rapid tonic activity. At 10-6
M dopamine (third trace) both axons fired still faster.
In 12 of the 15 experiments, we applied dopamine at both
10-10 and 10-9 M. In
each experiment, spike frequencies were measured in control saline and in the
last 5 min of a 15 min dopamine application. In 9 of 12 experiments
10-10 M dopamine increased spike frequency
and in 11 of 12 experiments 10-9 M dopamine
increased spike frequency, indicating that the threshold for dopamine action,
although difficult to establish exactly, is consistent with dopamine acting at
concentrations expected to occur hormonally. The data from all 12 experiments
with both concentrations were pooled (Fig.
5C). Analysis of these data showed a dose-dependent
effect of dopamine application (p < 0.001, Friedman test).
It was not possible to do complete dose-response curves for dopamine action
because we saw considerable long-lasting desensitization at
10-6 M dopamine and higher (data not shown).
Nonetheless, we saw no statistical difference between preparations for which
10-9 M was the first application and those
for which 10-9 M application was followed the
application of lower concentrations (p > 0.7, unpaired t
test), indicating that hormonal levels of dopamine (10-9
M and lower) are not likely to result in considerable
desensitization.
Dopamine effects on preparations with intact modulatory input
To determine how dopamine affects the activity of PD neurons in more
realistic pyloric activity patterns, we did bath applications of
10-6 M dopamine in preparations with intact
modulatory inputs (Fig. 6).
This resulted in peripheral spike initiation in 10 of 14 cases (71%), with
highly variable numbers of antidromic spikes per cycle.
Figure 6A shows
example traces of intracellular PD recordings in 10-6
M dopamine in three different preparations. Trace 1 shows no
peripheral spike initiation, trace 2 shows weak activation with only one
antidromic spike per cycle, and trace 3 shows stronger activation of
peripheral spike initiation.

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Figure 6. Bath application of dopamine to preparations with intact modulatory inputs.
A, Intracellular recordings of PD neuron activity in 10-6
M dopamine from three different preparations (1, 2, 3). B,
C, Instantaneous cycle frequencies over time. Dopamine application
increased cycle frequency regardless of peripheral spike initiation. The onset
of the increase in cycle frequency was always earlier than the appearance of
antidromic spikes, and there was no additional increase in cycle frequency
after the onset of peripheral spiking. D, Mean cycle frequencies for
eight preparations. Cycle frequency in dopamine was significantly increased
compared with the control (p < 0.01, n = 8, paired
t test).
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In these experiments, the pyloric cycle frequency increased slightly but
significantly. This effect was not correlated with antidromic spikes invading
the neuropil. Figure
6B,C show plots of the instantaneous cycle frequency over
time from a preparation that did not exhibit peripheral spiking
(Fig. 6B) and one that
did (Fig. 6C). In both
cases the cycle frequencies increased with a comparable time course and
magnitude. Furthermore, the increase in cycle frequency had an earlier onset
than peripheral spike initiation and no additional increase was seen after the
appearance of antidromic spikes (Fig.
6C).
In eight preparations we recorded stretches of steady-state cycling in
control, 10-6 M dopamine and wash long enough
to determine the mean cycle frequencies
(Fig. 6D). The cycle
frequency increased from 0.67 ± 0.13 Hz in control to 0.77 ±
0.16 Hz in dopamine (mean ± SD, paired t test, p <
0.01). We never observed a breakdown of the slow-wave membrane oscillation as
described above for preparations with the stn blocked
(Fig. 2).
Effect of dopamine on total spike number
In preparations with intact modulatory input, in which the PD neurons
cycled at much faster frequencies compared with preparations with the stn
blocked, peripheral spike initiation was less frequent and weaker
(Fig. 6A).
Furthermore, when peripheral spiking was weak, these spikes were always
clustered late in the interburst interval
(Fig. 2B; trace 2 in
Fig. 6A). Therefore,
the silences after the bursts suggested that peripheral spike initiation might
be suppressed by orthodromic spikes for several hundreds of milliseconds.
Conversely, the slow-wave membrane oscillation of the PD neuron in somatic
recordings decreased in amplitude and cycle frequency with increased
antidromic spiking (Fig.
2C,D), which suggested that spikes invading the neuropil
antidromically were suppressing the burst mechanism. Competitive interactions
between orthodromic and antidromic spiking are the subject of our unpublished
research, but here we describe the relative contribution of centrally and
peripherally generated spikes to the overall spike frequency in
10-6 M dopamine in two cases: stn blocked and
stn intact.
In some experiments, it was possible to sort spikes in the intracellular PD
soma recording according to the different conduction delays between the STG
and pdn, thus classifying them as centrally or peripherally generated.
Figure 7A shows the
time course of changes in overall spike frequency as means from three
different experiments with the stn blocked. The actual frequencies and the
time course of the change in frequencies were so similar in these experiments
that bin values were averaged without normalization. Dopamine application
caused an approximately fourfold increase in overall spike frequency (from 2.0
± 0.9 Hz in control to 7.8 ± 1.9 Hz in dopamine, n = 4,
including one experiment in which we could not distinguish between orthodromic
and antidromic spikes, paired t test, p < 0.004). This
fourfold increase developed over several minutes, whereas the cycle frequency
increased less than threefold. This spike frequency increase was attributable
primarily to peripheral spiking. Although there was an initial increase in
orthodromic spiking with the onset of the increase in cycle frequency,
orthodromic spike frequency subsequently decreased steadily and centrally
generated spiking ceased eventually. After several minutes, the overall spike
frequency leveled off and spikes were almost entirely generated in the
periphery, although a slow-wave membrane oscillation of PD was still
present.

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|
Figure 7. Relative contribution of antidromic and orthodromic spikes to the overall
spike frequency in 10-6 M dopamine. Intracellularly
recorded spikes were sorted according to different conduction delays between
STG and pdn using a delay filter algorithm. A, Average bin values
(± SEM) of mean spike frequency and cycle frequency from three
preparations with modulatory inputs from the CoGs and the OG removed by
blocking impulse activity in the stn with TTX/sucrose. At the beginning of
dopamine application (gray bar), the overall total spike frequency increased
because of an increase of orthodromic spike frequency with increasing cycle
frequency. Later, the contribution of orthodromic spiking to the overall spike
frequency decreased and antidromic spiking increased. B, In a
preparation with intact modulatory input and relatively strong antidromic
spiking (Fig. 6A,
trace 3), the orthodromic spike frequency decreased with increasing antidromic
spike frequency, whereas the cycle frequency increased. Orthodromic spiking
did not cease, and both orthodromic and antidromic spike frequencies
eventually reached a steady level.
|
|
Orthodromic spiking did not cease during the application of
10-6 M dopamine to preparations with intact
modulatory inputs. Figure
7B shows overall spike and cycle frequencies from a
preparation with relatively strong antidromic spiking (trace 3 in
Fig. 6A). The overall
spike frequency increased only slightly with increasing cycle frequency. This
increase was attributable to antidromic spiking, because the orthodromic spike
frequency decreased over time. However, after several minutes, both antidromic
and orthodromic spike frequency remained at a steady level. Although the
increase in total overall spike frequency was much smaller in these
experiments compared with preparations in which the stn was blocked, the
increase was still significant from 8.3 ± 1.4 Hz in control to 9.6
± 1.3 Hz (means ± SD, n = 8, paired t test,
p < 0.001). The percentage of increase in spike frequency was not
significantly correlated with the increase in cycle frequency (Spearman rank
correlation test, p = 0.29).
Taken together, these data show that the total PD neuron spike frequency is
relatively unaffected in dopamine when the descending modulatory inputs are
intact and the central spike initiation remains active at a steady level, but
it is greatly increased by dopamine when the preparations are slowly rhythmic
before dopamine application.
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
Axons are usually thought to be obedient and faithful carriers of
information from one place to a distant site. In this work we show that the
axons of the PD neurons of the lobster stomatogastric nervous system are more
than mere carriers of information, but instead are both sensitive to dopamine
and capable of initiating spikes at peripheral sites. This argues that under
some conditions these axonal properties will alter the discharge pattern that
drives the muscles innervated by these neurons and may modify the central
networks in which these neurons are found. How general are these results
likely to be? It is possible that many axons in invertebrates may have these
capabilities, because there are numerous examples of neurons with multiple
spike initiation zones that project into several ganglia
(Hughes and Wiersma, 1960
;
Kennedy and Mellon, 1964
;
Calabrese, 1980
;
Dickinson et al., 1981
). In
this case, it may be advantageous to selectively alter the firing properties
of these neurons at many loci. This can be done with local presynaptic
contacts (Nusbaum et al.,
1992
) but could equally well be achieved by axonal
neuromodulation. Vertebrate myelinated axons are specialized to conduct action
potentials rapidly and precisely from one site to another. However, there are
reports that some vertebrate axons are chemosensitive and action potential
conduction can be altered by GABA (Alford
et al., 1991
; Sakatani et al.,
1991a
,
1991b
,
1993
;
Lim and Ho, 1998
;
Verdier et al., 2003
).
Interactions between multiple spike initiation zones
Different spike initiation sites in a single neuron can interact with each
other. Suppression of spike initiation at one site by spikes generated at a
different site has been found in leech heart motor neurons and intersegmental
interneurons (Calabrese, 1980
;
Maranto and Calabrese, 1983
)
as well as in cat and crayfish leg proprioceptor afferents
(Bevengut et al., 1997
;
Gossard et al., 1999
;
Cattaert and Bevengut, 2002
).
Such interactions could have important implications for the way the actual
output of a neuron is shaped. Peripheral spike initiation in the PD neurons
also appeared to be suppressed by "normal" spiking activity
generated in the STG neuropil. Early in dopamine application, centrally
generated bursts were followed by a period of silence before peripheral spikes
were generated again, and only a subset of the preparations with rapid control
rhythms exhibited peripheral spikes. In addition, spikes generated in the
periphery may also have an inhibitory effect on central spike initiation
(Fig. 2C,D).
Intrinsic bursting properties of the PD neuron axons
As in leech heart motor neurons
(Maranto and Calabrese, 1983
),
removal of central activity rapidly initiated bursting activity in the PD
axons (Fig. 5). The function of
this inherent bursting capability of the peripheral axon is not clear, but it
may assist in the conduction of bursting activity generated centrally
(Maranto and Calabrese,
1983
).
Dopamine most likely acts as a neurohormone on the peripheral PD
neuron axons
What is the source of dopamine for spike initiation in the peripheral PD
neuron axons? Dopamine is present both in the hemolymph and in modulatory
terminals in the STG neuropil, but there are no indications that it is present
in the peripheral motor nerves (Kushner
and Maynard, 1977
; Kushner and
Barker, 1983
; Cournil et al.,
1994
,
1995
;
Pulver et al., 2003
). We found
peripheral spike initiation in response to bath-applied concentrations of
dopamine similar to those measured for other hormones
(Livingstone et al., 1980
).
Therefore, the low threshold for dopamine action makes hormonal modulation by
dopamine plausible. The presence of dopamine in the pericardial organs of
crustaceans has been well established
(Cooke and Goldstone, 1970
;
Goldstone and Cooke, 1971
;
Siwicki et al., 1987
;
Pulver and Marder, 2002
).
Interestingly, the main source of dopamine in the pericardial organ is the
L-cell, the largest neuron in the CoGs. One might speculate that the L-cell
receives synaptic inputs in the CoG from neurons that are part of the
modulatory control system of the stomatogastric neurons and in so doing
control the hormonal liberation of dopamine as part of the regulation of food
processing.
The low threshold for spike initiation was found when we applied dopamine
to the whole periphery. In focal applications to small sections of nerve, such
low concentrations were ineffective. We made no attempt to determine the
actual threshold concentrations needed in small wells, but used saturating
concentrations. Many dopamine receptors are G-protein-coupled and regulate
cAMP levels (Gingrich and Caron,
1993
; Jackson and
Westlind-Danielsson, 1994
). Therefore, it is easy to imagine that
the application of dopamine to a small area of axon is effective only at
higher concentrations because second messengers diffuse in axial directions.
In addition, even if second-messengers levels are efficiently altered, actions
on membrane currents confined to the site of application are less efficient in
triggering spikes because the current spread up and down the axon will cause a
smaller voltage response compared with a situation in which the whole axon is
targeted by dopamine.
Effects of dopamine on the pyloric central pattern generator
The effects of dopamine application on the activity of the pyloric central
pattern generator have been described extensively in the spiny lobster, P.
interruptus (Harris-Warrick et al.,
1998
). The effect of dopamine application on the pacemaker kernel
in P. interruptus is complex, because it has different actions on the
electrically coupled PD and AB neurons
(Marder and Eisen, 1984
;
Flamm and Harris-Warrick,
1986b
). It hyperpolarizes the PD neurons and reduces spike
frequency. At the same time, it has an excitatory effect on the AB neuron.
Therefore, at any time, the net effect of dopamine is a reflection of opposing
effects that on average result in a small decrease in pyloric cycle frequency
(Ayali and Harris-Warrick,
1999
). In H. americanus, we found a consistent increase
in pyloric cycle frequency even in the absence of antidromic spikes. However,
detailed comparisons between the effects of dopamine in the two species are
impossible because most of the data in P. interruptus were collected
using 10-4 M dopamine, whereas our data were
collected using 10-6 M dopamine and lower
because rhythmic activity rapidly and completely ceased in higher
concentrations.
In P. interruptus, antidromic nerve stimulations have been shown
to fail to evoke synaptic potentials in postsynaptic neurons
(Mulloney and Selverston,
1972
), and in the crab LG neuron, antidromic spikes evoked by the
application of serotonin have no effect on LG target cells in the STG
(Meyrand et al., 1992
). We did
not test if the same is true for the PD neurons in H. americanus
because spike-mediated IPSPs are usually not seen in soma recordings of
neurons postsynaptic to the PD neurons
(Fig. 2)
(Thirumalai and Marder, 2002
).
However, if antidromic spikes affect the membrane potential and bursting
properties of the PD neurons (Fig.
2), this may change the transmitter release of the PD neurons and
indirectly lead to changes in the phase relationships between pyloric
neurons.
Dopamine effects have not been studied extensively in the stomatogastric
nervous system of the crab, Cancer borealis. However, some
preliminary results (Marder and Weimann,
1992
) suggest similarities to H. americanus. In C.
borealis, 10-6 M dopamine also elicits
tonic spiking in the PD neurons, although it is not known where these spikes
are generated.
Functional implications of peripheral spike initiation in PD for
muscle contractions
The spikes generated in the PD neuron axons are antidromic from the
perspective of the PD neuron soma recordings, but they travel both up to the
STG and down the axons to the pdn, which innervates a subset of the pyloric
dilator muscles (Maynard and Dando,
1974
). Ultimately, changes in motor neuron activity result in
different movements only if the muscles can follow these changes. For example,
serotonin-evoked low-frequency spiking after a burst in the LG neuron in the
crab stomatogastric system leads to a sustained contraction in only one of the
three muscles innervated by LG (Meyrand et
al., 1992
).
Work in many systems has shown that the neuron-to-muscle transform is
nonlinear (Morris and Hooper,
1997
,
1998
,
2001
;
Brezina et al., 2000
;
Brezina and Weiss, 2000
;
Hooper and Weaver, 2000
). Many
invertebrate muscles, including crustacean stomach muscles, have slow
contraction dynamics. Some of the muscles innervated by the PD neurons in
P. interruptus show slow relaxation properties that lead to temporal
summation of muscle tension (Morris and Hooper,
1997
,
1998
,
2001
). Consequently, bursting
input is transformed into phasic contractions that ride on top of a tonic
baseline tension (Fig.
8A). The relative amplitudes of the tonic and phasic
components are critically dependent on the burst frequency of the neural
input. The tonic component decreases in amplitude at lower cycle frequencies
and the phasic component increases (Fig.
8B). In slow muscles, extraburst tonic spiking like we
found in the PD neurons in H. americanus is likely to change both the
average contraction amplitude and the ratio between tonic and phasic
components. Because of suppression of peripherally initiated spikes by
centrally generated spikes this effect may be predominantly present at low
cycle frequencies (Fig.
8C). In summary, our data suggest that hormonally
liberated dopamine could ensure that adequate muscle tone is maintained even
at low pyloric cycle frequencies by activating axonal dopamine receptors and
triggering peripheral spikes to fill in motor neuron discharge during long
interburst intervals.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Mar. 24, 2003;
revised Jun. 11, 2003;
accepted Jun. 13, 2003.
This work was supported by National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke Grant NS17813 (E.M.) and Stipend BU 1361/1-1 of the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (D.B.). We thank Kristina Rehm and Stefan Pulver for
help with some of the initial experiments, Astrid Prinz for stimulating
discussions, and Ralph DiCaprio for his hospitality and help with Spike2
programming.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Dirk Bucher, Volen Center, MS
013, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, Waltham, MA 02454-9110. E-mail:
bucher{at}brandeis.edu.
V. Thirumalai's present address: Beckman Building, Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, P.O. Box 100, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236866-10$15.00/0
 |
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