Red Pigment Concentrating Hormone Strongly Enhances the Strength of the Feedback to the Pyloric Rhythm Oscillator But Has Little Effect on Pyloric Rhythm Period
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 95 (3) , 1762-1770
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00764.2005
Abstract
The neuropeptide, red pigment concentrating hormone (RPCH), strengthened the inhibitory synapse from the lateral pyloric (LP) neuron to the pyloric dilator (PD) neurons in the pyloric network of the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the lobster, Homarus americanus . RPCH produced several-fold increases in the amplitude of both action potential–mediated and non–impulse-mediated transmission that persisted for as long as the peptide remained present. Because the LP to PD synapse is the only feedback to the pacemaker kernel of the pyloric network, which consists of the electrically coupled two PD neurons and the anterior burster (AB) neuron, it might have been expected that strengthening the LP to PD synapse would increase the period of the pyloric rhythm. However, the period of the pyloric rhythm increased only transiently in RPCH, and a transient increase in cycle period was observed even when the LP neuron was hyperpolarized. Phase response curves were measured using the dynamic clamp to create artificial inhibitory inputs of variable strength and duration to the PD neurons. Synaptic conductance values seen in normal saline were ineffective at changing the pyloric period throughout the pyloric cycle. Conductances similar to those seen in 10−6 M RPCH also did not evoke phase resets at phases when the LP neuron is typically active. Thus the dramatic effects of RPCH on synaptic strength have little role in modulation of the period of the pyloric rhythm under normal operating conditions but may help to stabilize the rhythm when the cycle period is too slow or too fast.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Target-Specific Short-Term Dynamics Are Important for the Function of Synapses in an Oscillatory Neural NetworkJournal of Neurophysiology, 2005
- Different Sensory Systems Share Projection Neurons But Elicit Distinct Motor PatternsJournal of Neuroscience, 2004
- Dynamic Interaction of Oscillatory Neurons Coupled with Reciprocally Inhibitory Synapses Acts to Stabilize the Rhythm PeriodJournal of Neuroscience, 2004
- The dynamic clamp comes of ageTrends in Neurosciences, 2004
- Follower Neurons in Lobster (Panulirus interruptus) Pyloric Network Regulate Pacemaker Period in Complementary WaysJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- A small-systems approach to motor pattern generationNature, 2002
- Short-Term Synaptic PlasticityAnnual Review of Physiology, 2002
- The dynamic clamp: artificial conductances in biological neuronsTrends in Neurosciences, 1993
- The structure of the stomatogastric neuromuscular system inCallinectes sapidus,Homarus americanusandPanulirus argus(Decapoda Crustacea)Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1974
- SIMPLER NETWORKS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1972