Serotonergic sensory‐motor neurons mediate a behavioral response to hypoxia in pond snail embryos
- 17 June 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neurobiology
- Vol. 52 (1) , 73-83
- https://doi.org/10.1002/neu.10071
Abstract
Oxygen (O2) is one of the most important environmental factors that affects both physiological processes and development of aerobic animals, yet little is known about the neural mechanism of O2 sensing and adaptive responses to low O2 (hypoxia) during development. In the pond snail, Helisoma trivolvis, the first embryonic neurons (ENC1s) to develop are a pair of serotonergic sensory-motor cells that regulate a cilia-driven rotational behavior. Here, we report that the ENC1-ciliary cell circuit mediates an adaptive behavioral response to hypoxia. Exposure of egg masses to hypoxia elicited a dose-dependent and reversible acceleration of embryonic rotation that mixed capsular fluid, thereby facilitating O2 diffusion to the embryo. The O2 partial pressures (Po2) for threshold, half-maximal, and maximal rotational response were 60, 28, and 13 mm Hg, respectively. During hypoxia, embryos relocated to the periphery of the egg masses where higher Po2 levels occurred. Furthermore, intermittent hypoxia treatments induced a sensitization of the rotational response. In isolated ciliary cells, ciliary beating was unaffected by hypoxia, suggesting that in the embryo, O2 sensing occurs upstream of the motile cilia. The rotational response of embryos to hypoxia was attenuated by application of the serotonin receptor antagonist, mianserin, correlated to the development of ENC1-ciliary cell circuit, and abolished by laser-ablation of ENC1s. Together, these data suggest that ENC1s are unique oxygen sensors that may provide a good single cell model for the examination of mechanistic, developmental, and evolutionary aspects of O2 sensing. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 52: 73–83, 2002Keywords
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