 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2003, 23(7):3039
Directional Avoidance Turns Encoded by Single Interneurons and
Sustained by Multifunctional Serotonergic Cells
Jian
Jing and
Rhanor
Gillette
Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology and the
Neuroscience Program, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
 |
ABSTRACT |
Avoidance turns in the sea slug Pleurobranchaea are
responses to noxious stimuli and replace orienting turns to food
stimuli after avoidance conditioning or satiation. Avoidance turns
proved to be centrally patterned behaviors, the fictive expression of which could be elicited in reduced preparations and the isolated CNS. Activity in one of a bilateral interneuron pair, the A4 cells, was
necessary and sufficient to drive the avoidance turn toward the
contralateral side. Single A4 cells appeared to encode both turn
direction and angle, in contrast to directional behaviors of other
animals in which displacement angle is usually encoded by multiple units.
The As1-4 cells, bilateral serotonergic cell clusters, excited the
prolonged A4 burst during the turn through electrical and chemical
coupling. However, during the escape swim, As1-4 became integral
elements of the swim motor network, and A4 activity was entrained to
the swim rhythm by alternating excitatory-inhibitory inputs, with only
weak spiking. This provides a likely mechanism for the previously
observed suppression of the avoidance turn by escape swimming. These
observations add significant new aspects to the multiplying known
functions of As1-4 and their homologs in other molluscs and point to a
pivotal role of these neurons in the organization of gastropod behavior.
Simple functional models predict (1) the essential actions of inhibitor
neurons in the directionality of the turning network motor output and
(2) an integrating role for As1-4 in the behavioral switch between
turning avoidance and swimming escape, on the basis of their response
to increasing stimulus intensity.
Key words:
Pleurobranchaea; orienting and
avoidance turns; directional behavior; population coding; escape
swimming; central pattern generator; mollusc; premotor neurons; avoidance behavior; behavioral decision
 |
Introduction |
Active animals may either orient to
or avoid salient stimuli in the environment, depending on stimulus
modality and strength, internal state, and experience. The
decision-making mechanisms that direct orienting or avoidance are basic
to foraging and reproductive strategies and for avoidance of
unnecessary risk from predation and self-injury. The premotor network
systems that mediate directional turning can be expected to provide
relatively simple model systems for addressing how sensation, appetite,
and experience are integrated at the level of the neural network.
Specifically, understanding of network structure and function can be
used to address how the animal decides to make either orienting or
avoidance turns and how direction and amplitude of those turns are computed.
Directional turning in the predatory sea slug Pleurobranchaea
californica differs markedly in its nature, depending on whether the animal responds to appetitive or aversive stimuli. Orienting turns
are goal directed, tend to be relatively precise, and are corrected
continuously by appetitive sensory input, enabling eventual localization of the stimulus source. In contrast, the avoidance turn is
stereotypic in nature and resembles a classic fixed action pattern in
its triggerability and episodic nature. Avoidance turns also differ
from orienting turns in their coarse nature, generally involving angles
of 30-250°, which are sufficient to redirect the animal's
locomotion clearly away from the stimulus.
Turning responses to both appetitive and noxious stimuli in
Pleurobranchaea, as for animals with more complex CNS, are
modifiable through associative learning (Mpitsos and Collins, 1975 ) and
changing hunger state (Gillette et al., 2000 ). Specifically, avoidance turns replace orienting turns to food stimuli after avoidance conditioning or satiation. To elucidate the decision-making processes that choose among avoidance turns and alternative behaviors, we have
studied neuronal mechanisms that mediate the avoidance turn.
By describing the distribution and innervation of muscles mediating
turning behavior as well as fictive avoidance turning motor output, we
were able to identify a pair of premotor neurons, the A4 cells, in the
cerebropleural ganglion that individually commanded the avoidance turn.
Their apparent ability to encode both turn direction and amplitude is
novel for single neurons (see Discussion for a comparison with other
systems). A bilaterally paired serotonergic interneuron group, the
As1-4, found previously to have dual roles in the centrally patterned
genesis of escape swimming behavior and in general behavioral arousal
(Jing and Gillette, 1999 , 2000 ), sustained A4 activity through
electrical and chemical excitation. These results add further dimension
to the multifunctionality of the As1-4 neurons and emphasize their prominence in the organization of the animal's behavior. Simple functional models outline the structure of the avoidance turn network
and its interaction with the escape swimming network.
Preliminary reports have been published previously (Jing and Gillette,
1996 ; Jing, 1998 ).
 |
Materials and Methods |
Specimens of Pleurobranchaea californica (3-600 gm)
were obtained from Sea-Life Supply (Sand City, CA) and Pacific
BioMarine (Santa Monica, CA) and kept in circulated artificial seawater at 14°C until use.
Gross anatomy: muscle distribution and nerve innervation.
Animals were anesthetized by isotonic MgCl2
injection (30-50% body volume). Viscerae were removed through a
dorsal or ventral cut, and the remaining body with ganglia was bathed
in 50% isotonic MgCl2 in seawater at 4°C for
2 hr. In some preparations, the bathing solution was replaced with
3-10% buffered formalin in isotonic MgCl2 for fixation.
The distribution of superficial nerves and muscles was drawn, and then
they were carefully cut away to expose underlying structure. The
attachments and directional orientation of muscle bands were especially
noted, and the sites where nerve branches entered the muscles were described.
Intact animals: videotaping the behavior and nerve lesion.
When observing the animal's turning behavior, the animal was placed on
the side of the tank, and the animal's foot or its back was videotaped
during actual behavior. Avoidance turning was induced by shocking
unilaterally the animal's oral veil for 1-2 sec (10-40 V, 20 Hz, 10 msec duration; delivered by a bipolar 20 gauge chlorided silver wire
electrode with 1 mm exposed tips 2 cm apart). Avoidance turn episodes
were digitized (25 frames per second) for frame-by-frame analysis of
body position and turn angle (compare Fig. 2).
For lesion experiments, animals were first anesthetized by injection of
30-50% of the body volume of isotonic MgCl2
(filtered with a 0.22 µm syringe filter). A longitudinal dorsal
incision of 1-2 cm was made between the rhinophores. The pedal or
cerebropleural nerves of interests were exposed and cut. Care was taken
to avoid loss of body fluid. The dorsal incision was then sutured shut with sterile surgical suture (5-O for small animals, 4-O for large animals), and the animal was returned to a tank of circulated artificial seawater for recovery. To improve recovery, 10-30% of body
volume of filtered fresh artificial sea water was injected into the
animal every 1-2 hr two to three times after the surgery. Typically,
animals recovered in 24 hr and resumed normal-seeming locomotion and
other activity.
Whole animals, isolated CNS, and reduced preparations.
Dissections were made under cold anesthesia at 4°C. Whole animal
preparations, isolated nervous systems, and reduced (hemi-animal)
preparations were as described previously (London and Gillette, 1984 ;
Jing and Gillette, 1995 ). Whole animal preparations were made by
accessing the cerebropleural ganglion through a 2 cm dorsal incision
and pinning it to a wax platform. Hooks retracting the incision
partially supported and restrained the animal for stable intracellular
recordings but left it capable of considerable movement, including
turning and vigorous swimming and feeding behavior. The preparation
chamber was constantly perfused with fresh artificial seawater
(14°C). Isolated CNS preparations included cerebropleural and pedal
ganglia and buccal ganglion and were pinned to Sylgard, under saline at 14°C, of composition (in mM): 420 NaCl, 10 KCl,
25 MgCl2, 25 MgSO4, 10 CaCl2, and 10 MOPS buffer, adjusted to pH 7.5 with NaOH. A reduced preparation comprised the head (oral veil,
tentacle, rhinophore, and sometimes mouth) and the CNS with
cerebropleural nerves intact. These structures were then pinned on a
Sylgard dish with two connected chambers for CNS and head for
electrical recording and stimulation of head sensory organs. Fictive
avoidance turning was induced with a similar stimulation protocol as
for intact animals. For stimulating fictive turning or swimming in the
isolated CNS, monopolar shocks of 2 msec in duration, 1-5 V, 15 Hz,
for 1-2 sec, were delivered to nerves through suction electrodes.
Intracellular and extracellular recordings were done with conventional
KCl-filled glass micropipettes and polyethylene suction electrodes as
described previously (Jing and Gillette, 1995 ). Data were recorded on a
chart recorder (Gould TA11; sampling rate, 250 kHz) and on a video tape recorder.
Functional synaptic connections were examined in normal saline for
PSP ability to follow presynaptic spikes one-for-one as a
criterion of probable monosynapticity. Assays of probable
monosynapticity or polysynapticity were also conducted in high-divalent
saline (in mM): 240 NaCl, 10 KCl, 125 MgCl2, 25 MgSO4, 30 CaCl2, and 10 MOPS to elevate spike thresholds
and curtail polysynaptic activation.
Electrical coupling was assayed by passage of hyperpolarizing current
into one cell and measuring steady-state polarization in its partner.
The steady-state coupling coefficient was taken as the ratio of
postsynaptic to presynaptic voltage change.
Data analysis. Taped data of intracellular recordings were
later plotted for measures of resting potential and spike height and
duration (at half amplitude). Spike height measures were taken when
cells were spontaneously active at only low rates to avoid use-dependent attenuation.
To quantify the turning motor output in bilateral motor nerves (see
Fig. 3), the spike events in extracellular recordings were counted over
time using peak detection by commercial software, and the mean spike
frequency was plotted. Mean spike frequency was calculated in bins of 1 sec and results were plotted in spikes per second.
Cell identification and intracellular staining. The A
cluster neurons are located on the dorsal side of the cerebropleural ganglion near the root of the rhinophore nerve (Jing and
Gillette, 1995 , 1999 ). The cells As2 and As3 are indistinguishable and
are referred to here singly as As2/3, as previously. Elements of the central pattern generator (CPG) for escape swimming were identified from their electrophysiology and circuitry connections as described in
the previous report (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ). The neurons A4 and A7
are newly described here (see Table 2).
Neuron morphology was studied by iontophoretic or pressure injection
with biocytin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) or neurobiotin
(Vector, Burlingame, CA) from the recording electrode as described
previously (Jing and Gillette, 1995 ). After an incubation of varying
period, tissues were fixed, and the stain was developed and viewed in cleared whole mounts. Pressure injection of somata allowed staining of
axon processes up to 2 cm from the injection site after ganglia were
incubated overnight at 8°C.
 |
Results |
Turning toward or away from a stimulus in
Pleurobranchaea is effected through asymmetrical contraction
of longitudinal lateral body wall and foot muscles. Thus, an orienting
turn is achieved through contraction of muscle ipsilateral to the
stimulus, whereas avoidance is done by contralateral muscle
contraction. To analyze the neural circuitry of turning, we
described the anatomy and innervation of the muscles likely to be
involved and assessed their functional roles in lesion experiments. We
then characterized motor nerve activity during fictive avoidance
turning and used that activity as an indicator to identify putative
premotor turning neurons coactive during the turning response.
Functional anatomy of turning: muscle distribution
and innervation
Longitudinal muscles of the body wall and foot
The lateral body wall muscle (LBWM) lies prominently on the
internal surface of the lateral body wall, just dorsal to the edge of
the foot. It is formed of three strap-like muscle bands that begin anteriorly and join
posteriorly as shown (Fig. 1, Table 1).
The LBWM is connected to the body wall along its entire length, such
that contraction compresses and folds the external skin. The most
medial band (band A) originates anteriorly at the oral tube and ventral
part of the mouth, oral veil, and ventral tentacle. The next band (band
B) originates in the lateral region of oral veil, mouth, dorsal
tentacle, and base of the rhinophore. The most lateral band (band C)
originates at the dorsal region of the oral veil, mouth, and oral tube
and buccal mass.

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
The lateral body wall muscles
(LBWM). A, Schematic drawing of
the position of the LBWM viewed from the left side of an intact animal.
B, Distribution of muscle bands and nerve innervation in
dorsal view in a dissected preparation. Lateral body wall muscles are
shown on the left. The LBWM of the right side is
generally similar, with slight asymmetry caused by the presence of
reproductive organs, anus, and heart (data not shown). The muscle bands
A, B, and C of LBWM are
shown, as are the large fascicles of the LMF and the circular muscles
of the foot. The major innervation of LBWM is from the posterior
lateral body wall nerve (pLBWN) of the
pedal ganglion. Other innervation comes from the anterior lateral body
wall nerve (aLBWN) of the pedal ganglion and the
body wall nerve (BWN) of the cerebropleural
ganglion. Foot muscles and pedal cilia are innervated by the medial
pedal nerve (mPN), posterior pedal nerve
(pPN), and anterior pedal nerve
(aPN) [which goes below the branch A1 of band A
of LBWM (Table 1) to innervate the foot there; data not shown] of the
pedal ganglion.
|
|
According to Brace (1977a ,b ), this muscle may originate from the
lateral columellar muscle (LCM) attached to the external or internal
shell present in most other gastropods. The name LCM has been used for
the analogous muscle of Aplysia (Cook and Carew, 1989 ;
Kuenzi and Carew, 1994 ), which has also been called the lateral
longitudinal muscle (Bablanian et al., 1987 ). In Aplysia, this muscle mediates the horizontal component of head-waving behavior (Cook and Carew, 1989 ; Kuenzi and Carew, 1994 ) and may also mediate, at
least partially, appetitive head turning (Teyke et al., 1990 ) and
directional defensive responses (Walters and Erickson, 1986 ).
Additional longitudinal muscles of a large fascicle type can also be
observed along the body wall. Other body wall muscle fibers lie
dorsally as well as externally to the LBWM in small bundles oriented
helically, longitudinally, and circularly. The longitudinal muscles of
the foot (LMF) lie in large fascicles interwoven with circular and
helical muscles.
Innervation of the muscles
The longitudinal muscles described above are innervated by
bilaterally symmetrical nerves from the pedal and cerebropleural ganglia (Fig. 1, Table 1) (see Fig. 4A for
relevant CNS anatomy). The LBWM is divisible into two functional parts
related to its distribution and innervation. (1) Those major portions
of the LBWM that appear to mediate the lateral flexion prominent in
avoidance turns receive most innervation from the posterior
lateral body wall nerve (pLBWN), as well as some branches from the
anterior LBWN (aLBWN) and possibly from the body wall nerve (BWN)
(because aLBWN and BWN anastomose). The pLBWN from the right pedal
ganglion also sends a major branch to the genital ganglion, termed the pedal-genital connective (PGC) (Table 1). (2) The anterior LBWM terminates in all head regions associated with food chemosensation and
feeding, including oral veil, tentacle, and rhinophore, and the feeding
motor areas including the mouth, oral tube, and base of the buccal
mass, consistent with roles in head posture and movement during
feeding. These anterior portions of the LBWM are innervated by pedal
nerve 2 (P2) (Lee and Liegeois, 1974 ), the mouth nerve, and to a lesser
extent by the large and small oral veil nerves (LOVNs and SOVNs). Body
wall muscles dorsal to LBWM are primarily innervated by aLBWN and BWN.
The anterior, medial, and posterior portions of the muscles of the foot
are innervated by the anterior, medial and posterior pedal nerves
(aPNs, mPNs, and pPNs), respectively.
Neural correlates of avoidance turning
The avoidance turn
Avoidance turning can be reliably elicited in intact animals by
electrically shocking the oral veil or tentacles unilaterally (Fig.
2). Such turns are indistinguishable from
those caused by naturally noxious and avoidance-conditioned stimuli
(Mpitsos and Davis, 1973 ; Gillette et al., 1991 ). It is a stereotypic
behavior observed in at least five notaspid opisthobranch species
(Gillette et al., 1991 ). After stimulation, forward locomotion is
suppressed and the head is withdrawn. Beginning the turn, the anterior
part of the foot is lifted slightly off the substrate while the animal flexes right or left 45-250° away from the stimulus, pivoting on its
broadened posterior foot/tail region, which remains attached to the
substrate. In seven animals, the turn was completed on average within
34 ± 1.4 sec, from turn initiation to the beginning of
locomotion, when the anterior foot region reattached to the substrate
and forward locomotion commenced (Fig. 2). At the end of the turn and
beginning of locomotion, the tail narrowed to a sharper tip and was
frequently detached from the substrate. In contrast to the avoidance
turn, orienting turning did not interrupt locomotion and was more
variable in amplitude of turning angles.

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
The progression of the avoidance turn of a living
animal, viewed dorsally. Drawings were from video frames of the
avoidance turn to the right side induced by electric shock
(Probe) to the left oral veil. Initial responses were
head withdrawal, body shortening, and turn initiation. At ~30 sec,
the animal extended its body and locomoted away from the stimulus. The
tail, which remained attached to substrate, did not change position
during the actual turning phase. Arrows show direction
faced by the animal, based on extension of a line joined by midpoints
of oral veil and neck. Inset, Plot of turn angle versus
time relative to the initial direction of the animal.
|
|
Nerve lesion experiments
We lesioned nerves to examine the functional roles of the LBWM and
LMF, and of their nerves, in avoidance turning. Avoidance turning was
induced by unilateral application of an electrical shock to the oral
veil and tentacle region. Effects of shock on the avoidance turn were
compared before and after lesions. Neither single nor incomplete
combinations of unilateral lesions of aLBWN, pLBWN, and BWN
or aPN, mPN, and pPN completely eliminated turning behavior; complete
elimination required lesion of all six nerves (n = 5).
Thus, all of the longitudinal muscles of the body wall and the foot may
contribute to turning. Lesioning of the pedal nerves (aPN, mPN, and
pPN) also eliminated ciliary movement on the lesioned side of the foot,
indicating that the pedal nerves mediate ciliary movements as well
contribute to turns (n = 3).
Fictive avoidance turning in reduced preparations and
isolated CNS
We recorded fictive avoidance turning motor activity in the nerves
of reduced preparations of head and attached CNS. Electrical shock was
applied to the head while motor output was recorded from the cut
nerves. Among the nerves examined, the pLBWNs showed the most
prominent, directionally specific activity expected of fictive avoidance turning (Fig. 3)
(n = 8), and these nerves were therefore used in
subsequent experiments to monitor turning motor activity.

View larger version (49K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
The posterior lateral body wall nerve shows
directionally specific motor activity after unilateral shock
(bars) to the head region in a reduced preparation.
Initial activity (<5 sec), presumed to represent head withdrawal, is
present in both nerves. Subsequent activity is greatest in the nerve
contralateral to the shock application, consistent with fictive
avoidance turning. A, Shock to left side.
B, Shock to right side. Mean spike frequency is plotted
below the nerve recordings (bin size 1 sec; see Materials and Methods);
dotted lines are baseline frequency. Vertical
rectangles indicate stimulation interval.
LpLBWN, Left pLBWN; RpLBWN, right
pLBWN.
|
|
The motor activity in pLBWN had two components: (1)
an early burst of activity lasting <5 sec of similar intensity in both right and left nerves, accompanied by local head and oral veil contraction in the reduced preparation. This response was of
appropriate time course to correspond to head withdrawal in the intact
animal. (2) A later component exhibited most prominent activity in the nerve contralateral to the stimulus, which lasted several tens of
seconds and was temporally consistent with the avoidance turn.
Subsequently, we found that similar, unilaterally specific activity
occurred in pLBWNs of the completely isolated CNS (n = 16) (compare Figs. 5, 9) in response to shock of either of the bilateral LOVN innervating the oral veil. The LOVN carries
mechanosensory information from the oral veil to the brain (Kovac and
Davis, 1980 ). Tentacle and rhinophore nerves were less effective in
inducing directionally specific activity in pLBWN. Shock thresholds for avoidance turns, for the electrodes used, lay between 1 and 5 V. Lower
intensity shocks elicited only weak activity in pLBWN, whereas shock
intensities >5 V caused strong and prolonged spike activity in
bilateral pLBWN and occasionally the cyclic bursting of fictive escape swimming.
Turning premotor neurons
To find premotor neurons that mediate the turning behavior, we
surveyed neurons in the A cluster of the cerebropleural ganglion (Fig.
4A). The A cluster is a
group of interneuron cell bodies that mostly project to the pedal
ganglion (Jing and Gillette, 1995 , 1999 ), from which the turn muscles
are innervated. The A cluster contains elements of the CPG for escape
swimming and other interneurons connected with the CPG that interact
with the feeding and other motor networks (Fig. 4A)
(Jing and Gillette, 1999 , 2000 ). The summary model of Figure 14 may be
consulted on the functional identities of the neurons discussed here.
We looked for possible avoidance turning premotor neurons while
observing cell responses to aversive electrical shock applied to one
side of the oral veil in the reduced preparation and to stimulation of
LOVN in the isolated CNS.

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Relative location and morphology of A4 and its
activity during a fictive swim. A, The axon of A4
courses laterally to the ipsilateral aCPC, branching in
the cerebropleural neuropile before entering the connective
(n = 9). The axon enters the pedal ganglion to
branch there in the neuropil. Inset, Locations of the
interneurons in the A cluster (dorsal surface). Somata are shown only
unilaterally for convenience. Cerebropleural ganglion:
BWN, body wall nerve; sBWN, small body
wall nerve; CBC, cerebrobuccal connective;
aCPC, anterior cerebropedal connective;
pCPC, posterior cerebropedal connective;
CVC, cerebrovisceral connective; LOVN,
large oral veil nerve; MN, mouth nerve;
RN, rhinophore nerve; SCC, subcerebral
commissure; SOVN, small oral veil nerve;
TN, tentacle nerve. Pedal ganglion:
aLBWN, anterior lateral body wall nerve;
pLBWN, posterior lateral body wall nerve;
PC, pedal commissure; pPC, parapedal
commissure; aPN, anterior pedal nerve;
mPN, medial pedal nerve; pPN, posterior
pedal nerve. B, A4 (bottom) was weakly
active during escape swimming elicited by BWN stimulation
(bar). The membrane potential of A4 oscillated in phase
with As2/3 (middle), the activity of which led slightly
that of the A1 swim interneuron (top).
|
|
Directionally specific activity of A4 and As1-3
Among the A cluster, we found five neurons with responses to LOVN
stimulation that corresponded well to the turning motor output. These
neurons were the newly characterized A4 and the previously identified
serotonergic As1-4 cells (Fig. 4A) (Jing and
Gillette, 1999 ). Alone of all A cluster cells, the A4 cells showed
strong and directionally specific activity in a prolonged burst closely
corresponding to the fictive avoidance turn (Fig. 5A) (n = 11).
For 2-6 sec after the shock stimulus, prolonged tonic firing (13-17
Hz) occurred for tens of seconds in the A4 ipsilateral, but not
contralateral, to the stimulus.

View larger version (79K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Asymmetric spiking activity of A4 interneurons
during avoidance turns in isolated CNS and whole animals.
A, In isolated CNS, shocks to left (A1)
or right (A2) LOVN (bars) elicited
fictive avoidance turns represented in strong motor activity in right
pLBWN (RpLBWN, A1) and left pLBWN
(LpLBWN, A2), respectively. The spike
activity of left and right A4 cells was directionally specific: the A4
ipsilateral to the stimulus was active whereas the contralateral A4 was
inactive. After the fictive turn, the A4 showed slow bursting activity
in anti-phase to each other, corresponding to similar slow oscillation
in the bilateral pLBWN (A2). Records of
A1 and A2 are separated by ~10 min.
Records in A2 are continuous. B, In a
whole-animal preparation, an A4 fired a prolonged burst during an
avoidance turn induced by mechanical stimulation of the ipsilateral
oral veil (bar).
|
|
In some preparations, as shown in Figure 5A2, after the
avoidance turn period, a slow rhythm of spontaneous activities in the
bilateral A4 cells began to occur in anti-phase to each other, perhaps
representing frequent spontaneous left/right turning as has been
occasionally observed in intact animals after avoidance turns
(our unpublished observations). A4 proved to be difficult to
hold while recording avoidance turns in whole animal preparations; however, two such recordings were successfully made in which spike activity similar to fictive avoidance turns was observed (Fig. 5B).
As1-3 cells, the serotonergic swim interneurons, were also activated
during and after the avoidance turning phase (Fig.
6). The As1-3 groups of both sides of
the brain were sensitive to laterality of the shock, with the cells
ipsilateral to the stimulus showing higher activity. In six
experiments, average spike frequencies for As2/3 responses to
ipsilateral shock were 7.3 Hz, whereas contralateral responses were 3.5 Hz. For As1, ispilateral responses were 3.5 Hz versus 2.5 Hz for
contralateral responses (n = 3). The latencies of
As1-3 responses to stimuli were shorter for ipsilateral than for
contralateral cells.

View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Directional sensitivity of As2/3 response to LOVN
shock. A, Ipsilateral oral veil nerve stimulation
(bar) induced short-latency firing (0.6 sec) at moderate
spike rate (6-8 Hz). B, Contralateral stimulation
(bar) induced a response with longer latency (>3 sec)
and lower frequency (3-5 Hz). As1 also showed directional sensitivity
to oral veil stimulation (see Results).
|
|
Other neurons in the A cluster either showed little response to LOVN
stimulation (A1, A10, A3) or their responses did not correspond well to
fictive turning motor output (A7) (Table
2). These cells are not addressed further
here except for their connectivity with A4.
Anatomy and electrophysiology of A4
The anatomy and much of the synaptic connectivity of As1-4 have
been described previously (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ). The soma of A4
lies next to the somata of As1-3 and A3 (Fig. 4A),
which it resembles in color and size. The single axon of A4 projects to
the ipsilateral pedal ganglion through the anterior cerebropedal connective (Fig. 4A, Table 2), in contrast to most
other neurons in the A cluster, which project contralaterally.
A4 is synaptically driven by neurons of the escape swim CPG but is not
a part of the CPG. During fictive escape swims, the membrane potential
of A4 oscillated in phase with that of As1-3 (Fig.
4B) (26 observations in 18 preparations), sometimes
firing spikes during the depolarized phase (in 15 of 26 observations). A4 spike activity varied with swim intensity, being less active during
weaker swims and building slightly in intensity over multiple cycles.
The duration and activity phases of these later bursts matched those of
As2/3. There were no detectable effects of hyperpolarizing a single A4
neuron on the escape swim (n = 5).
A4 made strong connections to As1-4 in both electrical and chemical
coupling. A4 was electrically coupled to As2-4, with coupling between
As2/3 and A4 being strongest and rectifying, in that hyperpolarizing current passed from A4 to As2/3 caused a larger postsynaptic voltage change than for the reverse (Fig.
7A1, Table
3). A4 made probable monosynaptic and
reciprocal chemical excitatory connections with As1 (Fig.
7A2,A3) with no electrical component. The
compound EPSPs induced by a train of 10-20 spikes had amplitudes of
1-4 mV (n = 5), with a time to peak of 3-4 sec, and
decayed over 10-20 sec.

View larger version (9K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Synaptic connectivity of A4. A,
Synaptic connections between A4 and the ipsilateral As1-3.
A1, A4 was electrically coupled to As2 and As3 because
A4 and As3 were hyperpolarized when As2 was injected with a
hyperpolarizing current (bar). As2 and As3 are
indistinguishable, so name assignment for these two cells is arbitrary.
A2, Depolarization of As1 (bar) to spike elicited slow
EPSPs in A4 and As2/3. A3, Depolarization of A4
(bar) to spike elicited slow EPSPs in As1. All
recordings were made in high divalent saline. B,
Synaptic connections between A4 and the ipsilateral A1. Depolarization
of A1 (bar) to spike induced biphasic effects in A4, an
early excitation followed by inhibition. Spikes in A4 were clipped.
Recordings were made in normal saline.
|
|
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 3.
Electrical coupling ratios (steady state) between A4 and
ipsilateral or contralateral swim interneurons, As2-4
|
|
In normal saline, the synaptic connection from A1 to A4 resembled that
observed for As1-3 (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ), a biphasic early
excitation followed by late inhibition (Fig. 7B)
(n = 14 of 15). These connections were abolished in
high divalent saline and were likely to be polysynaptic. No connections
from A4 to A1 were observed.
An A4 had similar connections with the contralateral As1-4 as with the
ipsilateral: reciprocal chemical excitation with contralateral As1 and
electrical coupling with As2-4 (Table 3). Electrical coupling was also
observed between the bilateral A4 pair (coupling ratio, ~0.1), but
because A4 axons do not cross to contralateral sides, coupling was
probably made indirectly through the electrical connections to As2-4,
axons of which run contralaterally (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ).
A finding of apparent significance to the mechanism of turning
directionality was that an As1 also hyperpolarized and inhibited its
contralateral A4 relatively strongly (Fig.
8), whereas inhibition of ipsilateral A4
was less strong and overridden by depolarization (compare Fig.
7A2). This inhibition was simultaneous with excitatory effects of As1 on both ipsilateral and contralateral A4 cells described
above. The asymmetric inhibition of the A4 cells by single As1 neurons
is consistent with a simple network model of avoidance turn
directionality (see Discussion, Fig. 13).

View larger version (13K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
As1 strongly inhibits the contralateral A4.
Driving an As1 with depolarizing current injection (bar)
elicited depolarization in both ipsilateral and contralateral A4
(i-A4, c-A4), which was
subsequently overridden by inhibition in the c-A4. Inhibition was slow,
with occasional phasic IPSPs. Inhibitory potentials induced in i-A4
were less effectual. Recordings were made in high divalent
saline.
|
|
Roles of A4 and As1-3 in avoidance turning
We tested the requirements for A4 and As1-3 in avoidance turning
by hyperpolarizing them to see whether turning motor output in the
pLBWN was affected. Hyperpolarizing A4 had the most significant effects. In five experiments, turning motor output was nearly eliminated (Fig. 9). The brief burst of
spikes in pLBWN during and immediately after LOVN stimulation,
corresponding to the phase of withdrawal behavior, was unaffected by
hyperpolarization of A4.

View larger version (52K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Hyperpolarization of A4 blocked fictive turning.
A, Control. Fictive avoidance turning was elicited by
brief electrical stimulation (bar) of the right LOVN,
ipsilateral to the right A4 (R-A4). Fictive
turning was evident in the prominent, long-lasting (>30 sec) activity
in left posterior lateral body wall nerve (LpLBWN;
contralateral to R-A4). Less activity was present
in the right (ipsilateral) pLBWN (RpLBWN).
B, Hyperpolarization of A4 (between
arrowheads) after right LOVN stimulation suppressed the
long-lasting activity in LpLBWN. The initial activity burst (<10 sec)
immediately after LOVN stimulation in both LpLBWN and RpLBWN, presumed
to represent head and anterior body withdrawal, was unaffected.
Traces below nerve recordings are mean spike frequency
plots (bin size, 1 sec). See Figure 3 legend for details.
|
|
Hyperpolarization of As2/3 could also block fictive avoidance
turning (Fig. 10). The effect may
have been caused in part by the ability of As2/3 to hyperpolarize A4
through their electrical coupling. Figure 10B shows
an incident during the late phase of hyperpolarization of As2/3 when A4
escaped and fired a burst of ~25 sec, restoring avoidance turn
activity in contralateral pLBWN.

View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 10.
Role of As2/3 during avoidance turning.
A, Stimulation of right LOVN (bar)
activated both right As2/3 (R-As2/3) and right A4
(R-A4) and strong output in left pLBWN
(LpLBWN), indicative of an avoidance turn to the
left. B, Hyperpolarization of As2/3
(arrowheads) suppressed fictive avoidance turning output
in LpLBWN, until R-A4 escaped inhibition and fired a characteristic
bursting that lasted ~25 sec, when the turning activity was restored,
at least partially, in LpLBWN. Traces below nerve
recordings are mean spike frequency plots (bin size, 1 sec). See Figure
3 legend for details.
|
|
We tested the abilities of A4 and As1-3 to drive turning-like
activity in pLBWN. A4 tended to drive higher activity in the pLBWN
contralateral to its cell body (Fig.
11), similar to avoidance turns. A4 was
driven at spike rates 14-21 Hz in these experiments, overlapping the
frequencies observed in A4 during actual and fictive turns (average
frequency calculated over 4-6 sec periods, 13-17 Hz) (Figs. 5, 9,
10). Of five A4 cells tested in five isolated CNS, four drove higher
activity in the contralateral pLBWN, whereas one drove similar activity
in pLBWN of both sides. The nerve activity was less prominent when
spontaneously active A4 cells were driven. In two separate cases, A4
cells with high spontaneous activity failed to drive significant
activity in either pLBWN, suggesting accommodation of a polysynaptic
pathway.

View larger version (35K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 11.
A4 drives fictive avoidance turning.
Activation (bar) of the left A4
(L-A4) induced strong activity in right pLBWN
(A, RpLBWN), suggesting a
contralateral turn. Likewise, activation (bar) of the
right A4 (R-A4) induced strong activity in left
pLBWN (B, LpLBWN).
Traces below nerve recordings are mean spike frequency
plots (bin size, 1 sec). See Figure 3 legend for details.
|
|
Of the As1-3 group, As2/3 had the most significant effects on
spike activity in pLBWN (Fig.
12A). In 15 As2/3
cells tested, 8 drove highest activity in the ipsilateral pLBWN, 2 drove more activity in the contralateral nerve, 3 elicited similar
activity in the bilateral nerves, and the remaining 2 were ineffective. In four experiments, the As1 neuron induced activity in both pLBWNs, with higher intensity in contralateral pLBWNs in two cases and in
ipsilateral pLBWNs in the other two. In sum, the As cells tend to drive
higher activity in ipsilateral pLBWNs, but the effects are variable.

View larger version (45K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 12.
As2/3 activates A4 and concomitant activity in
pLBWN. A, Driving a right As2/3 (R-As2/3,
bar) induced strong activity in the right, but not left,
pLBWN. Note that the left As2/3 (L-As2/3) was not
activated. Traces below nerve recordings are mean spike
frequency plots (see details in Fig. 3 legend). B, In a
different preparation, driving a right As2/3 (bar)
induced a prolonged burst in the left A4, with corresponding spike
activity in right pLBWN.
|
|
When we examined the effects of driving the cells of the As1-3
ensemble on A4, we found that they had the capacity to induce activity
resembling the prolonged burst of the avoidance command (n = 3). A brief (<10 sec) stimulation of a single
As2/3 induced prolonged bursting activity in the contralateral A4 with
corresponding pLBWN activity contralateral to A4 (Fig.
12B). Consequently, it is likely that the A4 cells
are the primary interneurons that mediate avoidance turning behavior
and that As1-4 sustain A4 activity during the turn by providing
electrical and chemical excitation to A4.
 |
Discussion |
The avoidance turn of Pleurobranchaea, like the
animal's escape swim, resembles a classic fixed-action pattern. It is
specifically triggered by noxious stimuli, is stereotypic, and occurs
in discrete episodes. Once triggered, the behavior proceeds through the
entire sequence without further sensory inputs. Here, study of the
genesis of the behavior has led to an enhanced view of neural network function in behavioral patterning and switching in this animal.
Mechanisms of avoidance turning
Lateral turns in soft-bodied animals with hydrostatic skeletons
arise from bilateral control of longitudinal muscles, whereas circular
or perpendicularly oriented muscles stabilize body length and diameter
during bending (Kier and Smith, 1985 ; Kuenzi and Carew, 1994 ). We
described distinct longitudinal muscle groups in
Pleurobranchaea, in body wall and foot, including three
prominent and symmetrical bands of lateral body wall muscle that
mediate lateral avoidance turns.
A centrally patterned origin of avoidance turning was confirmed in
semi-intact and completely deafferented preparations. The asymmetrical
and prolonged motor activity recorded in the nerves (pLBWNs) after oral
veil or LOVN shock was then used to identify the turning interneurons,
the bilaterally paired A4 cells, and the As1-4 cells.
The A4 neurons command the avoidance turn through spike activity
necessary and sufficient to the behavior
The A4 cells were asymmetrically activated during a stimulated
turn, and their prolonged activity closely corresponded to the turn
duration (20-40 sec). A unilateral noxious stimulus to the oral veil
activated a prolonged burst in the ipsilateral A4, which drove
contralateral bending of the body wall; the contralateral A4 was
inhibited during the turn. Hyperpolarization of the ipsilateral cell
blocked the turn.
The As1-4 neurons sustain the command
The serotonergic swim interneurons As1-4 are essential to
avoidance turning by sustaining A4 activity and providing
directionality of A4 activity. The cells of each As1-4 ensemble are
coupled electrically and chemically to the A4 and can induce prolonged
A4 activity when active. The directionality of A4 activity may be
promoted by the As1 ipsilateral to A4, which is more active and elicits strong inhibition in the contralateral A4.
The primary function of As2/3 during turns may be to provide excitation
to A4, whereas As1 essentially specifies the dominant and
subordinate A4 sec. In quiescent preparations, an As2/3 could induce
prolonged activity in the contralateral A4, whereas during induced turns the combined activity of the bilateral As1-4 ensembles promoted activity of the ipsilateral A4. Although initiation of A4
activity by As2/3 is consistent with their role in sustaining A4
activity, the data suggest different functional roles for As2/3 and As1.
These observations and interpretations are summarized in a network
model (Fig. 13), which both shows the
known connectivity from which the concerted actions of A4 and As1-4
emerge and specifically predicts the existence of yet unidentified
inhibitory neurons. In summary, the model posits that a noxious
stimulus to one side of the head region activates the coupled A4 and
As1-4 cells of the ipsilateral side of the cerebropleural ganglion
that in turn drive inhibition of the contralateral A4. Activity of the
ipsilateral A4 drives the motor neurons of the contralateral body wall
muscle bands.

View larger version (33K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 13.
A network model for avoidance turning. In this
model, appropriate sensory input is presumed to act on A4 and As1-4
interneurons unilaterally. The prolonged A4 burst of the turn is
initiated and sustained by reverberating excitation among As1-4 and A4
neurons. Inhibition of the contralateral A4 is mediated by a
hypothetical inhibitory neuron (I)
primarily excited by As1 (Fig. 8). A4 would also excite the
"I" neuron through its excitation to As1-4, if not directly
as well. Potentially, the I neuron might also be activated by
unilateral sensory inputs (not shown). Finally, A4 excites the
contralateral turning motor neurons to cause a contralateral
turn.
|
|
Encoding of direction and angle of the avoidance turn:
comparative aspects
The avoidance turn of Pleurobranchaea is a directional
escape response in which both event and directionality are determined by a winner-take-all outcome of activity in only a few neurons. In
this, it resembles directional startle responses mediated by the
Mauthner neurons of the fish (Eaton et al., 2001 ) and the lateral and
medial giant neurons of the crayfish (Wine and Krasne, 1972 ; Edwards et
al., 1999 ). However, the neural mechanisms are distinct in three
respects. First, in contrast to fish and crayfish, Pleurobranchaea avoidance is apparently not served in
parallel by other, less specialized interneurons that contribute to
components of the overall behavior. Second, where escape in fish and
crayfish is a ballistic action of fractions of a second triggered by a single or few action potentials in Mauthner cell or giant fibers, A4-driven avoidance turning is 1000-fold longer in duration and driven
by a prolonged train of spikes. The A4 analog of the few commanding
spikes of giant cells of fish and crayfish is the prolonged depolarization of the burst. Like negative phonotaxis of cricket mediated by a sensory interneuron (Nolen and Hoy, 1984 ; Hoy,
1989 ), both directionality and duration of the avoidance behavior are set by a single neuron.
Third, it appears likely that both direction and angle of the avoidance
turn are encoded in the burst in a single A4, because (1) driving an A4
at spike rates observed during the actual and fictive turn produced
appropriate motor activity and (2) silencing an A4 did not merely alter
turn direction or amplitude but entirely nullified the turn. Thus, A4
is the major, and probably only, final determinant of the turning
command. This contrasts with other directional behaviors in which the
turn angle may be a function of activity in multiple neurons. In these,
direction angle is a "population vector" integrated from activities
of multiple neurons (for review, see Grillner et al., 1997 ; Sparks et
al., 1997 ). These include cockroach escape turns (Ritzmann, 1993 ; Levi
and Camhi, 2000 ; Comer and Robertson, 2001 ), leech bending (Lockery and
Kristan, 1990 ; Lewis and Kristan, 1998 ), primate saccadic eye movements
(Lee et al., 1988 ), and perhaps primate reaching (Georgopoulos et al.,
1986 ). The reason for this difference may lie in a greater need for
both spatial and temporal precision in muscle group coordination in
arthropod, annelid, and primate for the "targeted" nature of the
population vector responses, as opposed to the simpler temporal
simultaneity and only broad directionality required of molluscan muscle
bands in the avoidance turn.
Behavioral choice: avoidance turn or escape swim
How is avoidance behavior integrated into
Pleurobranchaea's behavioral repertory at the neural
network level? Avoidance turning is interrupted and suppressed by
expression of both active feeding (Gillette et al., 2000 ) and escape
swimming (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ). We speculate that avoidance turning
is suppressed by feeding network activity through the same or similar
corollary output paths shown previously to suppress reflex withdrawal
from tactile stimuli during feeding (Kovac and Davis, 1980 ).
The suppression of the avoidance turn by the escape swim may represent
a novel type of behavioral switch, however, in which elements providing
the intrinsic network excitation of the pattern generator for one
behavior (turning) can be effectively assimilated by the pattern
generator for the other (swimming). Thus, when the As1-4 neurons are
recruited into the swim oscillator, the A4 cells are phase-locked into
weak cyclic activity with the swim and thereby prevented from the tonic
unilateral discharge necessary to avoidance turns.
These data suggest a network model (Fig.
14) for the decision between expression
of escape swimming and the avoidance turn. The decision mechanism may
incorporate a neural network switch regulated by stimulus intensity in
which the level of As1-4 activity induced determines behavioral
expression. Swimming is a higher threshold avoidance behavior than the
turn, and the critical factor that recruits A1/A10 is related to the
strength of the As1-4 response to noxious stimuli. The As1-4 spike
frequencies recorded during avoidance turns were only approximately
half those during the swim (Jing and Gillette, 1999 ). We hypothesize
that activation of the A1/A10 ensemble of the swim network at the high
spike rates typical of the swim motor pattern initiates the swim and
coopts the As1-4 into the active swim network. The prolonged burst of the A4 cells that drives the avoidance turn is interrupted and suppressed by the cyclic excitation/inhibition of As1-4 in the swim
oscillator, dedicating behavioral expression to swimming. Otherwise, at
low stimulus intensities, a moderate and asymmetric As1-4 response
sustains avoidance turning.

View larger version (33K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 14.
A network model for behavioral choice between
avoidance turning and escape swimming, based on state transition in
neural networks by cooption of motive elements. As1-4 provide the
driving excitation in both the avoidance turning (the avoidance turning
interneuron A4) and the escape swimming CPG (Jing and Gillette, 1999 )
(the A1/A10 ensemble). Noxious stimulation of the head primarily
excites As1-4. At moderate levels of As1-4 activity, the avoidance
network formed by A4/As1-4 is expressed. At higher levels of
excitation and stronger activation of As1-4, the A1/A10 ensemble is
recruited to form the operational swim network, which then coopts
As1-4 into rhythmic burst activity phase-locked to the swim cycle.
Cyclic excitation and inhibition of A4 by swim interneurons during the
swim prevents the prolonged A4 burst and thereby suppresses avoidance
turning. As1-driven inhibition from the hypothetical inhibitory neurons
of the avoidance turning network (Fig. 8) may also contribute.
IVS, Ventral swim interneuron.
|
|
Multifunctionality of the As1-4 neurons
The serotonergic As1-4 show marked evolutionary conservation in
gastropods, along with critical and multifunctional roles in central
neural networks. We speculate that these neurons have been important
organizing elements of CNS function around which the broad
diversification in morphology, niche, and behavior of these molluscs
has occurred. The As1-4 are evolutionarily highly conserved neurons,
the presence of which has been demonstrated in the CNS of very
disparate species of opisthobranch and pulmonate gastropods (Sudlow et
al., 1998 ). In Pleurobranchaea, As1-4 were known to provide
the intrinsic neuromodulatory excitation to the swim CPG that sustains
the escape swim episode through multiple cycles (Jing and Gillette,
1999 ), as do the homologous DSI cells of Tritonia (Lennard
et al., 1980 ; Katz and Frost, 1997 ). Also in
Pleurobranchaea, As1-4 were found to exert a general
stimulatory role in the distributed serotonergic arousal network of the
mollusk, including other modulatory and serotonergic cells in both
feeding and locomotor networks (Jing and Gillette, 2000 ). As well, in Aplysia, a likely As4 homolog heterosynaptically facilitates
the gill-siphon withdrawal circuit (Mackey et al., 1989 ) and excites the serotonergic heart excitor (Xin et al., 2001 ). Probable As1-4 homologs in Clione provide premotor neuromodulatory
excitation of the locomotor cells (Satterlie and Norekian, 1996 ;
Orlovsky et al., 1999 ). In Tritonia, the As1-4 homologs
have other roles in reflexive withdrawal (Getting and Dekin, 1985 ) and
in driving locomotion, where they activate locomotion at low levels of
activity and escape swimming at higher (Popescu and Frost, 2002 ),
similar to their function in release of avoidance turning versus the
swim in Pleurobranchaea.
The present findings, that As1-4 also have prominent roles in
avoidance turning, indicate that they are critical, multifunctional components on which much of the organization of the animal's behavior rests. These results make it appear likely that the As1-4 and their
homologs in other gastropods have similar broad and pivotal roles in
the partitioning of behavior.
Thus, the avoidance turn is a centrally patterned, stereotypic response
mediated by a small neural network organized around the bilateral A4
interneuron pair, the asymmetric activity of which may encode both turn
direction and amplitude. The A4 command is sustained by activity in the
As1-4 cells, which also have critical roles in other, metastable,
neural networks in both gating and sustaining expression of quite
dissimilar behaviors. The better understanding of the neural basis of
avoidance turning in this animal may enable future studies of
mechanisms through which learning and internal state influence the
decision between orienting and avoidance turns in foraging behavior.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 27, 2002; revised Jan. 14, 2003; accepted Jan. 17, 2003.
This research was supported by National Science Foundation Grant
IBN-9808400 and National Institute of Mental Health Grant MH59339. We
thank Drs. Ralph DiCaprio and Kurt Potgieter for assistance in data analysis.
Correspondence should be addressed to Jian Jing, Department of
Physiology and Biophysics, Box 1218, Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029-6574. E-mail:
jjing{at}inka.mssm.edu.
 |
References |
-
Bablanian GM,
Weiss KR,
Kupfermann I
(1987)
Motor control of the appetitive phase of feeding behavior in Aplysia.
Behav Neural Biol
48:394-407[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Brace RC
(1977a)
Shell attachment and associated musculature in the Notaspidea and Anaspidea (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia).
Trans Zool Soc Lond
34:31-42.
-
Brace RC
(1977b)
The functional anatomy of the mantle complex and columellar muscle of tectibranch molluscs (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia), and its bearing on the evolution of opisthobranch organization.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
277:1-54[Medline].
-
Comer CM,
Robertson RM
(2001)
Identified nerve cells and insect behavior.
Prog Neurobiol
63:409-439[Medline].
-
Cook DG,
Carew TJ
(1989)
Operant conditioning of head-waving in Aplysia. I. Identified muscles involved in the operant response.
J Neurosci
9:3097-3106[Abstract].
-
Davis WJ,
Siegler MVS,
Mpitsos GJ
(1973)
Distributed neuronal oscillators and efference copy in the feeding system of Pleurobranchaea.
J Neurophysiol
36:258-274[Free Full Text].
-
Eaton RC,
Lee RK,
Foreman MB
(2001)
The Mauthner cell and other identified neurons of the brainstem escape network of fish.
Prog Neurobiol
63:467-485[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Edwards DH,
Heitler WJ,
Krasne FB
(1999)
Fifty years of a command neuron: the neurobiology of escape behavior in the crayfish.
Trends Neurosci
22:153-161[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Georgopoulos AP,
Schwartz AB,
Kettner RE
(1986)
Neuronal population coding of movement direction.
Science
233:1416-1419[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Getting PA,
Dekin MS
(1985)
Mechanisms of pattern generation underlying swimming in Tritonia. IV. Gating of central pattern generator.
J Neurophysiol
53:466-480[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gillette R,
Saeki M,
Huang R-C
(1991)
Defense mechanisms in notaspidean snails: acid humor and evasiveness.
J Exp Biol
156:335-347[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gillette R,
Huang RC,
Hatcher N,
Moroz LL
(2000)
Cost-benefit analysis potential in feeding behavior of a predatory snail by integration of hunger, taste, and pain.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
97:3585-3590[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Grillner S,
Georgopoulos AP,
Jordan LM
(1997)
Selection and initiation of motor behavior.
In: Neurons, networks, and motor behavior (Stein PS,
Grillner S,
Selverston AI,
Stuart DG,
eds), pp 1-19. Cambridge, MA: MIT.
-
Hoy RR
(1989)
Startle, categorical response, and attention in acoustic behavior of insects.
Annu Rev Neurosci
12:355-375[Medline].
-
Jing J
(1998)
Interacting premotor networks mediating behavioral selection in the predatory marine snail Pleurobranchaea californica.
In: PhD dissertation University of Illinois.
-
Jing J,
Gillette R
(1995)
Neuronal elements that mediate escape swimming and suppress feeding behavior in the predatory sea slug Pleurobranchaea.
J Neurophysiol
74:1900-1910[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jing J,
Gillette R
(1996)
Turning behavior in the predatory sea slug Pleurobranchaea: functional anatomy and neural mechanisms.
Soc Neurosci Abstr
22:1404.
-
Jing J,
Gillette R
(1999)
Central pattern generator for escape swimming in the notaspid sea slug Pleurobranchaea californica.
J Neurophysiol
81:654-667[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jing J,
Gillette R
(2000)
Escape swim network interneurons have diverse roles in behavioral switching and putative arousal in Pleurobranchaea.
J Neurophysiol
83:1346-1355[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Katz PS,
Frost WN
(1997)
Removal of spike frequency adaptation via neuromodulation intrinsic to the Tritonia escape swim central pattern generator.
J Neurosci
17:7703-7713[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kier WM,
Smith KK
(1985)
Tongues, tentacles and trunks: the biomechanics of movement in muscular-hydrostats.
Zool J Linn Soc
83:307-324.
-
Kovac MP,
Davis WJ
(1980)
Neural mechanism underlying behavioral choice in Pleurobranchaea.
J Neurophysiol
43:469-487[Free Full Text].
-
Kuenzi FM,
Carew TJ
(1994)
Head waving in Aplysia californica. II. Functional anatomy and muscular activity during behaviour.
J Exp Biol
195:53-74[Abstract].
-
Lee C,
Rohrer WH,
Sparks DL
(1988)
Population coding of saccadic eye movements by neurons in the superior colliculus.
Nature
332:357-360[Medline].
-
Lee RM,
Liegeois RJ
(1974)
Motor and sensory mechanism of feeding in Pleurobranchaea.
J Neurobiol
5:545-564[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Lennard PR,
Getting PA,
Hume RI
(1980)
Central pattern generator mediating swimming in Tritonia. II. Initiation, maintenance, and termination.
J Neurophysiol
44:165-173[Free Full Text].
-
Levi R,
Camhi JM
(2000)
Wind direction coding in the cockroach escape response: winner does not take all.
J Neurosci
20:3814-3821[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lewis JE,
Kristan WB
(1998)
Quantitative analysis of a directed behavior in the medicinal leech: implications for organizing motor output.
J Neurosci
18:1571-1582[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lockery SR,
Kristan WB
(1990)
Distributed processing of sensory information in the leech. II. Identification of interneurons contributing to the local bending reflex.
J Neurosci
10:1816-1829[Abstract].
-
London JA,
Gillette R
(1984)
Functional roles and circuitry in an inhibitory pathway to feeding command neurones in Pleurobranchaea.
J Exp Biol
113:423-446[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Mackey SL,
Kandel ER,
Hawkins RD
(1989)
Identified serotonergic neurons LCB1 and RCB1 in the cerebral ganglia of Aplysia produce presynaptic facilitation of siphon sensory neurons.
J Neurosci
9:4227-4235[Abstract].
-
Mpitsos GJ,
Davis WJ
(1973)
Learning: classical and avoidance conditioning in the mollusk Pleurobranchaea.
Science
180:317-320[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Mpitsos GJ,
Collins SD
(1975)
Learning: rapid aversive conditioning in the gastropod mollusk Pleurobranchaea.
Science
188:954-957[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nolen TG,
Hoy RR
(1984)
Initiation of behavior by single neurons: the role of behavioral context.
Science
226:992-994[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Orlovsky GN,
Deliagina TG,
Grillner S
(1999)
In: Neural control of locomotion. New York: Oxford UP.
-
Popescu IR,
Frost WN
(2002)
Highly dissimilar behaviors mediated by a multifunctional network in the marine mollusk Tritonia diomedea.
J Neurosci
22:1985-1993[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Ritzmann RE
(1993)
The neural organization of cockroach escape and its role in context-dependent orientation.
In: Biological neural networks in invertebrates: neuroethology and robotics (Beer RD,
Ritzmann RE,
Mckenna T,
eds), pp 113-137. San Diego: Academic.
-
Satterlie RA,
Norekian TP
(1996)
Modulation of swimming speed in the pteropod mollusc, Clione limacina: role of a compartmental serotonergic system.
Invert Neurosci
2:157-165[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Sparks DL,
Kristan WB,
Shaw BK
(1997)
The role of population coding in the control of movement.
In: Neurons, networks, and motor behavior (Stein PS,
Grillner S,
Selverston AI,
Stuart DG,
eds), pp 21-32. Cambridge, MA: MIT.
-
Sudlow LC,
Jing J,
Moroz LL,
Gillette R
(1998)
Serotonin-immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of the marine molluscs Pleurobranchaea californica and Tritonia diomedea.
J Comp Neurol
395:466-480[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Teyke T,
Weiss KR,
Kupfermann I
(1990)
Appetitive feeding behavior of Aplysia: behavioral and neural analysis of directed head turning.
J Neurosci
10:3922-3934[Abstract].
-
Walters ET,
Erickson MT
(1986)
Directional control and the functional organization of defensive responses in Aplysia.
J Comp Physiol [A]
159:339-351[Medline].
-
Wine JJ,
Krasne FB
(1972)
The organization of the escape behavior in the crayfish.
J Exp Biol
56:1-18[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Xin Y,
Koester J,
Jing J,
Weiss KR,
Kupfermann I
(2001)
Cerebral-abdominal interganglionic coordinating neurons in Aplysia.
J Neurophysiol
85:174-186[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/2373039-13$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. Jing, F. S. Vilim, E. C. Cropper, and K. R. Weiss
Neural Analog of Arousal: Persistent Conditional Activation of a Feeding Modulator by Serotonergic Initiators of Locomotion
J. Neurosci.,
November 19, 2008;
28(47):
12349 - 12361.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Berkowitz
Physiology and Morphology of Shared and Specialized Spinal Interneurons for Locomotion and Scratching
J Neurophysiol,
June 1, 2008;
99(6):
2887 - 2901.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
K. Sasaki, J. Jing, M. R. Due, and K. R. Weiss
An Input-Representing Interneuron Regulates Spike Timing and Thereby Phase Switching in a Motor Network
J. Neurosci.,
February 20, 2008;
28(8):
1916 - 1928.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J.-s. Wu, M. R. Due, K. Sasaki, A. Proekt, J. Jing, and K. R. Weiss
State Dependence of Spike Timing and Neuronal Function in a Motor Pattern Generating Network
J. Neurosci.,
October 3, 2007;
27(40):
10818 - 10831.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
L. S. Yafremava, C. W. Anthony, L. Lane, J. K. Campbell, and R. Gillette
Orienting and avoidance turning are precisely computed by the predatory sea-slug Pleurobranchaea californica McFarland
J. Exp. Biol.,
February 15, 2007;
210(4):
561 - 569.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
R. Gillette
Evolution and Function in Serotonergic Systems
Integr. Comp. Biol.,
December 1, 2006;
46(6):
838 - 846.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. A. Murray, J. Estepp, and S. D. Cain
Advances in the neural bases of orientation and navigation
Integr. Comp. Biol.,
December 1, 2006;
46(6):
871 - 879.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S. Thompson and W. H. Watson III
Central pattern generator for swimming in Melibe
J. Exp. Biol.,
April 1, 2005;
208(7):
1347 - 1361.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|

|