Sensorimotor gating commonly occurs at sensory neuron synapses onto motor circuit neurons and motor neurons. Here, using the crab stomatogastric nervous system, we show that sensorimotor gating also occurs at the level of the projection neurons that activate motor circuits. We compared the influence of the gastro-pyloric receptor (GPR) muscle stretch-sensitive neuron on two projection neurons, modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) and commissural projection neuron 2 (CPN2), with and without a preceding activation of the mechanosensory ventral cardiac neurons (VCNs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRhythmically active motor circuits are influenced by neuronally released and circulating hormone modulators, but there are few systems in which the influence of a peptide hormone modulator on a neuronally modulated motor circuit has been determined. We performed such an analysis in the isolated crab stomatogastric nervous system by assessing the influence of the hormone crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP) on the gastric mill (chewing) rhythm elicited by identified modulatory projection neurons. The gastric mill circuit is located in the stomatogastric ganglion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigher-order inputs provide important regulatory control to motor circuits, but few cellular-level studies of such inputs have been performed. To begin studying higher-order neurons in an accessible model system, we have localized, in the supraesophageal ganglion (brain), neurons that are candidates for influencing the well-characterized motor circuits in the stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) of the crab Cancer borealis. The STNS is an extension of the central nervous system and includes four ganglia, within which are a set of motor circuits that regulate the ingestion and processing of food.
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