The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 2001, 21(5):1645-1655
Local Specification of Relative Strengths of Synapses between
Different Abdominal Stretch-Receptor Axons and their Common Target
Neurons
Hideki
Nakagawa and
Brian
Mulloney
Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, University of
California, Davis, Davis, California 95616-8519
Stretch-receptor (SR) axons form a parallel array of 20 excitatory
synapses with target neurons in the crayfish CNS. In each postsynaptic
neuron, EPSPs from different SR axons differ significantly in size.
These amplitudes are correlated with the segment in which each axon
originates and form a segmental gradient of synaptic excitation in
individual postsynaptic neurons. These differences might arise
postsynaptically because of differential postsynaptic attenuation or
presynaptically because of local regulation of the strength of each
synapse. To examine these possibilities, we stimulated each SR axon
separately and studied integration of its EPSPs in an identified
neuron, Flexor Inhibitor 6 (FI6). Transmission from SR axons to
FI6 was chemical and direct: EPSPs were accompanied by an increased
postsynaptic conductance, were affected by extracellular
Ca2+, and showed frequency-dependent depression.
EPSPs from different SR axons summed linearly. The rise times of EPSPs
from different SR axons were not significantly different.
We also filled individual SR axons and FI6 neurons and mapped and
counted their points of contact. Each SR axon contacted each FI6
bilaterally, and contacts of SR axons from different segments were
intermingled on FI6. SR axons that made the strongest synapses made
more points-of-contact with FI6. These results imply that differences
in strength do not arise because of differential postsynaptic
attenuation of EPSPs, but rather because certain SR axons predictably
make more points of contact with FI6 than do others. Thus, this
gradient in excitation requires that each synapse be regulated by an
exchange between the SR axon and its target neuron.
Key words:
afferent synapse; synaptic depression; summation; gradient of excitation; synaptic integration; crayfish
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/2151645-11$05.00/0