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Sequential Development of Electrical and Chemical Synaptic Connections Generates a Specific Behavioral Circuit in the Leech
Neuronal circuits form during embryonic life, even before synapses are completely mature. Developmental changes can be quantitative (e.g., connections become stronger and more reliable) or qualitative (e.g., synapses form, are lost, or switch from electrical to chemical or from excitatory to inhibit...
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Published in: | The Journal of neuroscience 2005-03, Vol.25 (10), p.2478-2489 |
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creator | Marin-Burgin, Antonia Eisenhart, F. James Baca, Serapio M Kristan, William B., Jr French, Kathleen A |
description | Neuronal circuits form during embryonic life, even before synapses are completely mature. Developmental changes can be quantitative (e.g., connections become stronger and more reliable) or qualitative (e.g., synapses form, are lost, or switch from electrical to chemical or from excitatory to inhibitory). To explore how these synaptic events contribute to behavioral circuits, we have studied the formation of a circuit that produces local bending (LB) behavior in leech embryos. This circuit is composed of three layers of neurons: mechanosensory neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons. The only inhibition in this circuit is in the motor neuron layer; it allows the animal to contract on one side while relaxing the opposite side. LB develops in two stages: initially touching the body wall causes circumferential indentation (CI), an embryonic behavior in which contraction takes place around the whole perimeter of the segment touched; one or 2 d later, the same touch elicits adult-like LB. Application of bicuculline methiodide in embryos capable of LB switched the behavior back into CI, indicating that the development of GABAergic connections turns CI into LB. Using voltage-sensitive dyes and electrophysiological recordings, we found that electrical synapses were present early and produced CI. Inhibition appeared later, shaping the circuit that was already connected by electrical synapses and producing the adult behavior, LB. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4787-04.2005 |
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James</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Baca, Serapio M</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Kristan, William B., Jr</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>French, Kathleen A</creatorcontrib><title>Sequential Development of Electrical and Chemical Synaptic Connections Generates a Specific Behavioral Circuit in the Leech</title><title>The Journal of neuroscience</title><addtitle>J Neurosci</addtitle><description>Neuronal circuits form during embryonic life, even before synapses are completely mature. Developmental changes can be quantitative (e.g., connections become stronger and more reliable) or qualitative (e.g., synapses form, are lost, or switch from electrical to chemical or from excitatory to inhibitory). To explore how these synaptic events contribute to behavioral circuits, we have studied the formation of a circuit that produces local bending (LB) behavior in leech embryos. This circuit is composed of three layers of neurons: mechanosensory neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons. 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subjects | Animals Behavior, Animal - physiology Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive Electricity Hirudo Hirudo medicinalis - embryology Hirudo medicinalis - growth & development In Vitro Techniques Nerve Net - embryology Nerve Net - growth & development Physical Stimulation - methods Synapses - physiology |
title | Sequential Development of Electrical and Chemical Synaptic Connections Generates a Specific Behavioral Circuit in the Leech |
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