Laurent G, Naraghi M
California Institute of Technology, Biology Division, Pasadena 91125.
J Neurosci. 1994 May;14(5 Pt 2):2993-3004. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.14-05-02993.1994.
Kenyon cells are the intrinsic interneurons of the mushroom bodies in the insect brain, a center for olfactory and multimodal processing and associative learning. These neurons are small (3-8 microns soma diameter) and numerous (340,000 and 400,000 in the bee and cockroach brains, respectively). In Drosophila, Kenyon cells are the dominant site of expression of the dunce, DC0, and rutabaga gene products, enzymes in the cAMP cascade whose absence leads to specific defects in olfactory learning. In honeybees, the volume of the mushroom body neurophils may depend on the age or social status of the individual. Although the anatomy of these neurons has been known for nearly a century, their physiological properties and the principles of information processing in the circuits that they form are totally unknown. This article provides a first such characterization. The activity of Kenyon cells was recorded in vivo from locust brains with intracellular and local field potential electrodes during olfactory processing. Kenyon cells had a high input impedance (approximately 1 G omega at the soma). They produced action potentials upon depolarization, and consistently showed spike adaptation during long depolarizing current pulses. They generally displayed a low resting level of spike activity in the absence of sensory stimulation, despite a large background of spontaneous synaptic activity, and showed no intrinsic bursting behavior. Presentation of an airborne odor, but not air alone, to an antenna evoked spatially coherent field potential oscillations in the ipsilateral mushroom body, with a frequency of approximately 20 Hz. The frequency of these oscillations was independent of the nature of the odorant. Short bouts of oscillations sometimes occurred spontaneously, that is, in the absence of odorant stimulation. Autocorrelograms of the local field potentials in the absence of olfactory stimulation revealed small peaks at +/- 50 msec, suggesting an intrinsic tendency of the mushroom body networks to oscillate at 20 Hz. Such oscillatory behavior could not be seen from local field potential recordings in the antennal lobes, and may thus be generated in the mushroom body, or via feedback interactions with downstream neurons in the protocerebrum. During the odor-induced oscillations, the membrane potential of Kenyon cells oscillated around the resting level, under the influence of excitatory inputs phase-locked to the field activity. Each phasic wave of depolarization in a Kenyon cell could be amplified by intrinsic excitable properties of the dendritic membrane, and sometimes led to one action potential, whose timing was phase-locked to the population oscillations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
肯扬细胞是昆虫大脑蘑菇体中的内在中间神经元,蘑菇体是嗅觉和多模态处理以及联想学习的中心。这些神经元体积小(胞体直径3 - 8微米)且数量众多(蜜蜂和蟑螂大脑中分别有340,000和400,000个)。在果蝇中,肯扬细胞是笨蛋基因、DC0基因和大头菜基因产物的主要表达位点,这些基因产物是环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)级联反应中的酶,其缺失会导致嗅觉学习出现特定缺陷。在蜜蜂中,蘑菇体神经细胞的体积可能取决于个体的年龄或社会地位。尽管这些神经元的解剖结构已为人所知近一个世纪,但其生理特性以及它们所形成的神经回路中的信息处理原则却完全未知。本文首次对此进行了描述。在嗅觉处理过程中,使用细胞内电极和局部场电位电极在蝗虫大脑中对肯扬细胞的活动进行了活体记录。肯扬细胞具有高输入阻抗(胞体处约为1千兆欧)。它们在去极化时产生动作电位,并且在长去极化电流脉冲期间持续表现出动作电位适应现象。尽管存在大量自发突触活动背景,但在没有感觉刺激时,它们通常表现出低水平的动作电位活动,且没有内在的爆发性行为。向触角施加空气中的气味(而非仅空气)会在同侧蘑菇体中诱发空间相干的场电位振荡,频率约为20赫兹。这些振荡的频率与气味剂的性质无关。有时会自发出现短暂的振荡,即在没有气味剂刺激的情况下。在没有嗅觉刺激时局部场电位的自相关图显示在±50毫秒处有小峰值,这表明蘑菇体网络有以20赫兹振荡的内在倾向。从触角叶的局部场电位记录中看不到这种振荡行为,因此它可能是在蘑菇体中产生的,或者是通过与原脑下游神经元的反馈相互作用产生的。在气味诱发的振荡期间,肯扬细胞的膜电位在与场活动锁相的兴奋性输入的影响下,围绕静息水平振荡。肯扬细胞去极化的每个相位波都可以通过树突膜的内在兴奋性特性放大,有时会导致一个动作电位,其时间与群体振荡锁相。(摘要截选至400字)