Role of intrinsic properties in Drosophila motoneuron recruitment during fictive crawling.

J Neurophysiol

University of Arizona, Department of Neuroscience, PO Box 210077, Tucson, AZ 85721-0077, USA.

Published: September 2010

Motoneurons in most organisms conserve a division into low-threshold and high-threshold types that are responsible for generating powerful and precise movements. Drosophila 1b and 1s motoneurons may be analogous to low-threshold and high-threshold neurons, respectively, based on data obtained at the neuromuscular junction, although there is little information available on intrinsic properties or recruitment during behavior. Therefore in situ whole cell patch-clamp recordings were used to compare parameters of 1b and 1s motoneurons in Drosophila larvae. We find that resting membrane potential, voltage threshold, and delay-to-spike distinguish 1b from 1s motoneurons. The longer delay-to-spike in 1s motoneurons is a result of the shal-encoded A-type K(+) current. Functional differences between 1b and 1s motoneurons are behaviorally relevant because a higher threshold and longer delay-to-spike are observed in MNISN-1s in pairwise whole cell recordings of synaptically evoked activity during bouts of fictive locomotion.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2944697PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00298.2010DOI Listing

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