Aponte-Santiago Nicole A, Littleton J Troy
The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, Department of Biology and Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States.
Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Front Physiol. 2020 Dec 16;11:611982. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2020.611982. eCollection 2020.
Defining neuronal cell types and their associated biophysical and synaptic diversity has become an important goal in neuroscience as a mechanism to create comprehensive brain cell atlases in the post-genomic age. Beyond broad classification such as neurotransmitter expression, interneuron vs. pyramidal, sensory or motor, the field is still in the early stages of understanding closely related cell types. In both vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems, one well-described distinction related to firing characteristics and synaptic release properties are tonic and phasic neuronal subtypes. In vertebrates, these classes were defined based on sustained firing responses during stimulation (tonic) vs. transient responses that rapidly adapt (phasic). In crustaceans, the distinction expanded to include synaptic release properties, with tonic motoneurons displaying sustained firing and weaker synapses that undergo short-term facilitation to maintain muscle contraction and posture. In contrast, phasic motoneurons with stronger synapses showed rapid depression and were recruited for short bursts during fast locomotion. Tonic and phasic motoneurons with similarities to those in crustaceans have been characterized in Drosophila, allowing the genetic toolkit associated with this model to be used for dissecting the unique properties and plasticity mechanisms for these neuronal subtypes. This review outlines general properties of invertebrate tonic and phasic motoneurons and highlights recent advances that characterize distinct synaptic and plasticity pathways associated with two closely related glutamatergic neuronal cell types that drive invertebrate locomotion.
定义神经元细胞类型及其相关的生物物理和突触多样性,已成为神经科学领域的一个重要目标,作为在后基因组时代创建全面脑细胞图谱的一种机制。除了诸如神经递质表达、中间神经元与锥体神经元、感觉或运动等宽泛分类外,该领域在理解密切相关的细胞类型方面仍处于早期阶段。在脊椎动物和无脊椎动物的神经系统中,一种与放电特性和突触释放特性相关的、得到充分描述的区别是紧张性和相位性神经元亚型。在脊椎动物中,这些类别是根据刺激期间的持续放电反应(紧张性)与快速适应的瞬态反应(相位性)来定义的。在甲壳类动物中,这种区别扩展到包括突触释放特性,紧张性运动神经元表现出持续放电和较弱的突触,这些突触会经历短期易化以维持肌肉收缩和姿势。相比之下,具有较强突触的相位性运动神经元表现出快速抑制,并在快速运动期间被招募用于短脉冲发放。在果蝇中已经鉴定出与甲壳类动物中相似的紧张性和相位性运动神经元,这使得与该模型相关的遗传工具可用于剖析这些神经元亚型的独特特性和可塑性机制。本综述概述了无脊椎动物紧张性和相位性运动神经元的一般特性,并强调了最近的进展,这些进展表征了与驱动无脊椎动物运动的两种密切相关的谷氨酸能神经元细胞类型相关的独特突触和可塑性途径。