AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how the peptide hormone CCAP modifies the gastric mill rhythm in crabs by affecting the activity of the neuron MCN1, which controls chewing patterns.
  • CCAP enhances both protraction and retraction phases of the rhythmic movement by acting on the same inward current in the protraction neuron LG, but it does so more effectively due to its unique regulatory properties.
  • The findings suggest that different activation dynamics of a single ion current can lead to coordinated control of rhythmic motor activity, highlighting the complexity of neuronal network modulation.

Article Abstract

The cellular mechanisms underlying comodulation of neuronal networks are not elucidated in most systems. We are addressing this issue by determining the mechanism by which a peptide hormone, crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP), modulates the biphasic (protraction/retraction) gastric mill (chewing) rhythm driven by the projection neuron MCN1 in the crab stomatogastric ganglion. MCN1 activates this rhythm by slow peptidergic (CabTRP Ia) and fast GABAergic excitation of the reciprocally inhibitory central pattern generator neurons LG (protraction) and Int1 (retraction), respectively. MCN1 synaptic transmission is limited to the retraction phase, because LG inhibits MCN1 during protraction. Bath-applied CCAP also excites both LG and Int1, but selectively prolongs protraction. Here, we use computational modeling and dynamic-clamp manipulations to establish that CCAP prolongs the gastric mill protractor (LG) phase and maintains the retractor (Int1) phase duration by activating the same modulator-activated inward current (I(MI)) in LG as MCN1-released CabTRP Ia. However, the CCAP-activated current (I(MI-CCAP)) and MCN1-activated current (I(MI-MCN1)) exhibit distinct time courses in LG during protraction. This distinction results from I(MI-CCAP) being regulated only by postsynaptic voltage, whereas I(MI-MCN1) is also regulated by LG presynaptic inhibition of MCN1. Hence, without CCAP, retraction and protraction duration are determined by the time course of I(MI-MCN1) buildup and feedback inhibition-mediated decay, respectively, in LG. With I(MI-CCAP) continually present, the impact of the feedback inhibition is reduced, prolonging protraction and maintaining retraction duration. Thus, comodulation of rhythmic motor activity can result from convergent activation, via distinct dynamics, of a single voltage-dependent current.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2775474PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3079-09.2009DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how the peptide hormone CCAP modifies the gastric mill rhythm in crabs by affecting the activity of the neuron MCN1, which controls chewing patterns.
  • CCAP enhances both protraction and retraction phases of the rhythmic movement by acting on the same inward current in the protraction neuron LG, but it does so more effectively due to its unique regulatory properties.
  • The findings suggest that different activation dynamics of a single ion current can lead to coordinated control of rhythmic motor activity, highlighting the complexity of neuronal network modulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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