Li Wen-Chang, Roberts Alan, Soffe Stephen R
School of Biology, University of St Andrews, Bute Medical Building, Fife KY16 9TS, Scotland, UK.
J Physiol. 2009 Apr 15;587(Pt 8):1677-93. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2008.166942. Epub 2009 Feb 16.
Electrical coupling is important in rhythm generating systems. We examine its role in circuits controlling locomotion in a simple vertebrate model, the young Xenopus tadpole, where the hindbrain and spinal cord excitatory descending interneurons (dINs) that drive and maintain swimming have been characterised. Using simultaneous paired recordings, we show that most dINs are electrically coupled exclusively to other dINs (DC coupling coefficients approximately 8.5%). The coupling shows typical low-pass filtering. We found no evidence that other swimming central pattern generator (CPG) interneurons are coupled to dINs or to each other. Electrical coupling potentials between dINs appear to contribute to their unusually reliable firing during swimming. To investigate the role of electrical coupling in swimming, we evaluated the specificity of gap junction blockers (18-beta-GA, carbenoxolone, flufenamic acid and heptanol) in paired recordings. 18-beta-GA at 40-60 mum produced substantial (84%) coupling block but few effects on cellular properties. Swimming episodes in 18-beta-GA were significantly shortened (to approximately 2% of control durations). At the same time, dIN firing reliability fell from nearly 100% to 62% of swimming cycles and spike synchronization weakened. Because dINs drive CPG neuron firing and are critical in maintaining swimming, the weakening of dIN activity could account for the effects of 18-beta-GA on swimming. We conclude that electrical coupling among pre motor reticulospinal and spinal dINs, the excitatory interneurons that drive the swimming CPG in the hatchling Xenopus tadpole, may contribute to the maintenance of swimming as well as synchronization of activity.
电耦合在节律产生系统中很重要。我们在一个简单的脊椎动物模型——幼体非洲爪蟾蝌蚪中,研究了电耦合在控制运动的神经回路中的作用。在该模型中,驱动并维持游泳运动的后脑和脊髓兴奋性下行中间神经元(dINs)已得到表征。通过同步配对记录,我们发现大多数dINs仅与其他dINs存在电耦合(直流耦合系数约为8.5%)。这种耦合表现出典型的低通滤波特性。我们没有发现其他游泳中枢模式发生器(CPG)中间神经元与dINs之间或它们相互之间存在耦合的证据。dINs之间的电耦合电位似乎有助于它们在游泳过程中异常可靠地放电。为了研究电耦合在游泳中的作用,我们在配对记录中评估了缝隙连接阻滞剂(18-β-甘草次酸、羧苄青霉素、氟芬那酸和庚醇)的特异性。40 - 60 μM的18-β-甘草次酸可产生显著的(84%)耦合阻断,但对细胞特性影响很小。在18-β-甘草次酸作用下,游泳时长显著缩短(至对照时长的约2%)。与此同时,dIN放电可靠性从几乎100%降至游泳周期的62%,且峰电位同步性减弱。由于dINs驱动CPG神经元放电且对维持游泳至关重要,dIN活动的减弱可能解释了18-β-甘草次酸对游泳的影响。我们得出结论,在幼体非洲爪蟾蝌蚪中,驱动游泳CPG的运动前网状脊髓和脊髓dINs之间的电耦合,可能有助于维持游泳以及活动的同步性。