Narusuye Kenji, Nagahama Tatsumi
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kobe University, Kobe 657-8501, Japan.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Nov;88(5):2778-95. doi: 10.1152/jn.00757.2001.
The Japanese species Aplysia kurodai feeds well on Ulva but rejects Gelidium with distinctive rhythmic patterned movements of the jaws and radula. We have previously shown that the patterned jaw movements during the rejection of Gelidium might be caused by long-lasting suppression of the monosynaptic transmission from the multiaction MA neurons to the jaw-closing (JC) motor neurons in the buccal ganglia and that the modulation might be directly produced by some cerebral neurons. In the present paper, we have identified a pair of catecholaminergic neurons (CBM1) in bilateral cerebral M clusters. The CBM1, probably equivalent to CBI-1 in A. californica, simultaneously produced monosynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the MA and JC neurons. Firing of the CBM1 reduced the size of the inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) in the JC neuron, evoked by the MA spikes, for >100 s. Moreover, the application of dopamine mimicked the CBM1 modulatory effects and pretreatment with a D1 antagonist, SCH23390, blocked the modulatory effects induced by dopamine. It could also largely block the modulatory effects induced by the CBM1 firing. These results suggest that the CBM1 may directly modulate the synaptic transmission by releasing dopamine. Moreover, we explored the CBM1 spike activity induced by taste stimulation of the animal lips with seaweed extracts by the use of calcium imaging. The calcium-sensitive dye, Calcium Green-1, was iontophoretically loaded into a cell body of the CBM1 using a microelectrode. Application of either Ulva or Gelidium extract to the lips increased the fluorescence intensity, but the Gelidium extract always induced a larger change in fluorescence compared with the Ulva extract, although the solution used induced the maximum spike responses of the CBM1 for each of the seaweed extracts. When the firing frequency of the CBM1 activity after taste stimulation was estimated, the Gelidium extract induced a spike activity of ~30 spikes/s while the Ulva extract induced an activity of ~20 spikes/s, consistent with the effective firing frequency (>25 spikes/s) for the synaptic modulation. These results suggest that the CBM1 may be one of the cerebral neurons contributing to the modulation of the basic feeding circuits for rejection induced by the taste of seaweeds such as Gelidium.
日本物种黑指纹海兔能很好地以石莼为食,但会通过独特的有节奏的颌部和齿舌运动拒绝江蓠。我们之前已经表明,在拒绝江蓠时的有节奏的颌部运动可能是由于从多作用MA神经元到颊神经节中闭颌(JC)运动神经元的单突触传递受到长期抑制所致,并且这种调制可能是由一些脑神经元直接产生的。在本文中,我们在双侧脑M簇中鉴定出一对儿茶酚胺能神经元(CBM1)。CBM1可能等同于加州海兔中的CBI - 1,它在MA和JC神经元中同时产生单突触兴奋性突触后电位(EPSP)。CBM1的放电使MA尖峰诱发的JC神经元中抑制性突触后电流(IPSC)的大小在100多秒内减小。此外,多巴胺的应用模拟了CBM1的调制作用,用D1拮抗剂SCH23390预处理可阻断多巴胺诱导的调制作用。它也能很大程度上阻断CBM1放电诱导的调制作用。这些结果表明,CBM1可能通过释放多巴胺直接调制突触传递。此外,我们通过钙成像研究了用海藻提取物对动物唇部进行味觉刺激所诱导的CBM1尖峰活动。使用微电极将钙敏染料钙绿 - 1离子导入CBM1的细胞体。将石莼或江蓠提取物应用于唇部都会增加荧光强度,但与石莼提取物相比,江蓠提取物总是诱导出更大的荧光变化,尽管所用溶液对每种海藻提取物都诱导出了CBM1的最大尖峰反应。当估计味觉刺激后CBM1活动的放电频率时,江蓠提取物诱导出约30次/秒的尖峰活动,而石莼提取物诱导出约20次/秒的活动,这与突触调制的有效放电频率(>25次/秒)一致。这些结果表明,CBM1可能是有助于调制由江蓠等海藻味道诱导的拒绝基本摄食回路的脑神经元之一。