Author:
Crow Terry,Tian Lian-Ming
Abstract
Pavlovian conditioning in Hermissenda consists of pairing light,
the conditioned stimulus (CS) with activation of statocyst hair cells, the
unconditioned stimulus (US). Conditioning produces CS-elicited foot shortening
and inhibition of light-elicited locomotion, the two conditioned responses
(CRs). Conditioning correlates have been identified in the primary sensory
neurons (photoreceptors) of the CS pathway, interneurons that receive
monosynaptic input from identified photoreceptors, and putative pedal motor
neurons. While cellular mechanisms of acquisition produced by the synaptic
interaction between the CS and US pathways are well-documented, little is
known about the mechanisms responsible for the generation or expression of the
CR. Here we show that in conditioned animals light reduced tonic firing of
ciliary activating pedal neurons (VP1) below their pre-CS baseline levels. In
contrast, pseudorandom controls expressed a significant increase in
CS-elicited tonic firing of VP1 as compared to pre-CS baseline activity.
Identified interneurons in the visual pathway that have established
polysynaptic connections with VP1 were examined in conditioned animals and
pseudorandom controls. Depolarization of identified type Ie
interneurons with extrinsic current elicited a significant increase in IPSPs
recorded in VP1 pedal neurons of conditioned animals as compared with
pseudorandom controls. Conditioning also enhanced intrinsic excitability of
type Ie interneurons of conditioned animals as compared to
pseudorandom controls. Light evoked a modest increase in IPSP frequency in VP1
of conditioned preparations and a significant decrease in IPSP frequency in
VP1 of pseudorandom controls. Our results show that a combination of synaptic
facilitation and intrinsic enhanced excitability in identified components of
the CS pathway may explain light-elicited inhibition of locomotion in
conditioned animals.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
17 articles.
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