Heartbeat control in leeches. II. Fictive motor pattern.

J Neurophysiol

Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.

Published: January 2004

The rhythmic beating of the tube-like hearts in the medicinal leech is driven and coordinated by rhythmic activity in segmental heart motor neurons. The motor neurons are controlled by rhythmic inhibitory input from a network of heart interneurons that compose the heartbeat central pattern generator. In the preceding paper, we described the constriction pattern of the hearts in quiescent intact animals and showed that one heart constricts in a rear-to-front wave (peristaltic coordination mode), while the other heart constricts in near unison over its length (synchronous coordination mode) and that they regularly switch coordination modes. Here we analyze intersegmental and side-to-side-coordination of the fictive motor pattern for heartbeat in denervated nerve cords. We show that the intersegmental phase relations among heart motor neurons in both coordination modes are independent of heartbeat period. This finding enables us to combine data from different experiments to form a detailed analysis of the relative phases, duty cycle, and intraburst spike frequency of the bursts of the segmental heart motor neurons. The fictive motor pattern and the constriction pattern seen in intact leeches closely match in their intersegmental and side-to-side coordination, indicating that sensory feedback is not necessary for properly phased intersegmental coordination. Moreover, the regular switches in coordination mode of the fictive motor pattern mimic those seen in intact animals indicating that these switches likely arise by a central mechanism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00528.2003DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fictive motor
16
motor pattern
16
motor neurons
16
heart motor
12
coordination mode
12
motor
8
segmental heart
8
constriction pattern
8
intact animals
8
heart constricts
8

Similar Publications

The opioid epidemic is a pervasive health issue and continues to have a drastic impact on the United States. This is primarily because opioids cause respiratory suppression and the leading cause of death in opioid overdose is respiratory failure ( , opioid-induced respiratory depression, OIRD). Opioid administration can affect the frequency and magnitude of inspiratory motor drive by activating µ-opioid receptors that are located throughout the respiratory control network in the brainstem.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In clinics, physical injuries to the spinal cord cause a temporary motor areflexia below lesion, known as spinal shock. This topic is still underexplored due to the lack of preclinical spinal cord injury (SCI) models that do not use anesthesia, which would affect spinal excitability. Our innovative design considered a custom-made micro impactor that provides localized and calibrated strikes to the ventral surface of the thoracic spinal cord of the entire CNS isolated from neonatal rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Song-like activation of syringeal and respiratory muscles during sleep in canaries.

J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol

October 2024

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Departamento de Física, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Ciudad Universitaria, Buenos Aires, 1428, Argentina.

Sleep replay activity involves the reactivation of brain structures with patterns similar to those observed during waking behavior. In this study, we demonstrate that adult male canaries exhibit spontaneous, song-like peripheral reactivation during night sleep. Our findings include: (1) the presence of activity in respiratory muscles, leading to song-like air sac pressure patterns of low amplitude, (2) the simultaneous occurrence of respiratory replay events and reactivation of syringeal muscles, and (3) the reactivation of syringeal muscles without concurrent respiratory system activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neural substrates for saccadic modulation of visual representations in mouse superior colliculus.

bioRxiv

September 2024

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, and Neuroscience Program, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO 80045, United States of America.

How do sensory systems account for stimuli generated by natural behavior? We addressed this question by examining how an ethologically relevant class of saccades modulates visual representations in the mouse superior colliculus (SC), a key region for sensorimotor integration. We quantified saccadic modulation by recording SC responses to visual probes presented at stochastic saccade-probe latencies. Saccades significantly impacted population representations of the probes, with early enhancement that began prior to saccades and pronounced suppression for several hundred milliseconds following saccades, independent of units' visual response properties or directional tuning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent studies capitalizing on the newly complete nanometer-resolution larval connectome have made significant advances in identifying the structural basis of motor patterning. However, the molecular mechanisms utilized by neurons to wire these circuits remain poorly understood. In this study we explore how cell-specific expression of two isoforms, which mediate isoform-specific homophilic binding, contributes to motor patterning and output of larvae.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!