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1.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 7464, 2019 05 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31097722

ABSTRACT

Organisms use circulating diuretic hormones to control water balance (osmolarity), thereby avoiding dehydration and managing excretion of waste products. The hormones act through G-protein-coupled receptors to activate second messenger systems that in turn control the permeability of secretory epithelia to ions like chloride. In insects, the chloride channel mediating the effects of diuretic hormones was unknown. Surprisingly, we find a pentameric, cys-loop chloride channel, a type of channel normally associated with neurotransmission, mediating hormone-induced transepithelial chloride conductance. This discovery is important because: 1) it describes an unexpected role for pentameric receptors in the membrane permeability of secretory epithelial cells, and 2) it suggests that neurotransmitter-gated ion channels may have evolved from channels involved in secretion.


Subject(s)
Chloride Channels/metabolism , Chlorides/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Insect Hormones/metabolism , Animals , Chloride Channels/chemistry , Chloride Channels/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster , Epithelium/metabolism , Ion Channel Gating , Ion Transport , Malpighian Tubules/metabolism , Osmoregulation , Protein Domains , Xenopus
2.
Elife ; 82019 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30681408

ABSTRACT

The cerebellum integrates sensory stimuli and motor actions to enable smooth coordination and motor learning. Here we harness the innate behavioral repertoire of the larval zebrafish to characterize the spatiotemporal dynamics of feature coding across the entire Purkinje cell population during visual stimuli and the reflexive behaviors that they elicit. Population imaging reveals three spatially-clustered regions of Purkinje cell activity along the rostrocaudal axis. Complementary single-cell electrophysiological recordings assign these Purkinje cells to one of three functional phenotypes that encode a specific visual, and not motor, signal via complex spikes. In contrast, simple spike output of most Purkinje cells is strongly driven by motor-related tail and eye signals. Interactions between complex and simple spikes show heterogeneous modulation patterns across different Purkinje cells, which become temporally restricted during swimming episodes. Our findings reveal how sensorimotor information is encoded by individual Purkinje cells and organized into behavioral modules across the entire cerebellum.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Motor Activity/physiology , Purkinje Cells/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Zebrafish/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Calcium Signaling , Eye Movements/physiology , Phenotype , Regression Analysis , Swimming/physiology , Tail
3.
Curr Biol ; 27(9): 1288-1302, 2017 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28434864

ABSTRACT

A fundamental question in neurobiology is how animals integrate external sensory information from their environment with self-generated motor and sensory signals in order to guide motor behavior and adaptation. The cerebellum is a vertebrate hindbrain region where all of these signals converge and that has been implicated in the acquisition, coordination, and calibration of motor activity. Theories of cerebellar function postulate that granule cells encode a variety of sensorimotor signals in the cerebellar input layer. These models suggest that representations should be high-dimensional, sparse, and temporally patterned. However, in vivo physiological recordings addressing these points have been limited and in particular have been unable to measure the spatiotemporal dynamics of population-wide activity. In this study, we use both calcium imaging and electrophysiology in the awake larval zebrafish to investigate how cerebellar granule cells encode three types of sensory stimuli as well as stimulus-evoked motor behaviors. We find that a large fraction of all granule cells are active in response to these stimuli, such that representations are not sparse at the population level. We find instead that most responses belong to only one of a small number of distinct activity profiles, which are temporally homogeneous and anatomically clustered. We furthermore identify granule cells that are active during swimming behaviors and others that are multimodal for sensory and motor variables. When we pharmacologically change the threshold of a stimulus-evoked behavior, we observe correlated changes in these representations. Finally, electrophysiological data show no evidence for temporal patterning in the coding of different stimulus durations.


Subject(s)
Cerebellum/cytology , Cerebellum/physiology , Cytoplasmic Granules/physiology , Motor Activity/physiology , Sensorimotor Cortex/physiology , Zebrafish/physiology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Larva/cytology , Larva/physiology , Neurons/cytology , Neurons/physiology , Sensorimotor Cortex/cytology , Zebrafish/growth & development
4.
Front Neural Circuits ; 8: 121, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25324729

ABSTRACT

In all but the simplest monosynaptic reflex arcs, sensory stimuli are encoded by sensory neurons that transmit a signal via sensory interneurons to downstream partners in order to elicit a response. In the embryonic zebrafish (Danio rerio), cutaneous Rohon-Beard (RB) sensory neurons fire in response to mechanical stimuli and excite downstream glutamatergic commissural primary ascending (CoPA) interneurons to produce a flexion response contralateral to the site of stimulus. In the absence of sensory stimuli, zebrafish spinal locomotor circuits are spontaneously active during development due to pacemaker activity resulting in repetitive coiling of the trunk. Self-generated movement must therefore be distinguishable from external stimuli in order to ensure the appropriate activation of touch reflexes. Here, we recorded from CoPAs during spontaneous and evoked fictive motor behaviors in order to examine how responses to self-movement are gated in sensory interneurons. During spontaneous coiling, CoPAs received glycinergic inputs coincident with contralateral flexions that shunted firing for the duration of the coiling event. Shunting inactivation of CoPAs was caused by a slowly deactivating chloride conductance that resulted in lowered membrane resistance and increased action potential threshold. During spontaneous burst swimming, which develops later, CoPAs received glycinergic inputs that arrived in phase with excitation to ipsilateral motoneurons and provided persistent shunting. During a touch stimulus, short latency glutamatergic inputs produced cationic currents through AMPA receptors that drove a single, large amplitude action potential in the CoPA before shunting inhibition began, providing a brief window for the activation of downstream neurons. We compared the properties of CoPAs to those of other spinal neurons and propose that glycinergic signaling onto CoPAs acts as a corollary discharge signal for reflex inhibition during movement.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Interneurons/physiology , Sensory Gating/physiology , Swimming/physiology , 6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione/pharmacology , Action Potentials/drug effects , Afferent Pathways/physiology , Animals , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Glycine Agents/pharmacology , Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials/drug effects , Interneurons/drug effects , Larva , Nerve Net/drug effects , Nerve Net/physiology , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Physical Stimulation , Sensory Gating/drug effects , Sodium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Spinal Cord/cytology , Strychnine/pharmacology , Tetrodotoxin/pharmacology , Valine/analogs & derivatives , Valine/pharmacology , Zebrafish
5.
J Neurosci ; 34(29): 9644-55, 2014 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25031404

ABSTRACT

Spontaneous network activity is a highly stereotyped early feature of developing circuits throughout the nervous system, including in the spinal cord. Spinal locomotor circuits produce a series of behaviors during development before locomotion that reflect the continual integration of spinal neurons into a functional network, but how the circuitry is reconfigured is not understood. The first behavior of the zebrafish embryo (spontaneous coiling) is mediated by an electrical circuit that subsequently generates mature locomotion (swimming) as chemical neurotransmission develops. We describe here a new spontaneous behavior, double coiling, that consists of two alternating contractions of the tail in rapid succession. Double coiling was glutamate-dependent and required descending hindbrain excitation, similar to but preceding swimming, making it a discrete intermediary developmental behavior. At the cellular level, motoneurons had a distinctive glutamate-dependent activity pattern that correlated with double coiling. Two glutamatergic interneurons, CoPAs and CiDs, had different activity profiles during this novel behavior. CoPA neurons failed to show changes in activity patterns during the period in which double coiling appears, whereas CiD neurons developed a glutamate-dependent activity pattern that correlated with double coiling and they innervated motoneurons at that time. Additionally, double coils were modified after pharmacological reduction of glycinergic neurotransmission such that embryos produced three or more rapidly alternating coils. We propose that double coiling behavior represents an important transition of the motor network from an electrically coupled spinal cord circuit that produces simple periodic coils to a spinal network driven by descending chemical neurotransmission, which generates more complex behaviors.


Subject(s)
Motor Activity/physiology , Motor Neurons/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Spinal Cord/cytology , Synapses/physiology , 6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione/pharmacology , Action Potentials/drug effects , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electric Stimulation , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/pharmacology , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Motor Activity/drug effects , Motor Neurons/drug effects , Nerve Net/drug effects , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/embryology , Rhombencephalon/physiology , Spinal Cord/embryology , Synapses/classification , Synapses/drug effects , Transcription Factors/genetics , Valine/analogs & derivatives , Valine/pharmacology , Zebrafish , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics
6.
J Neurosci ; 30(26): 8871-81, 2010 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20592209

ABSTRACT

Neurons respond homeostatically to chronic changes in network activity with compensatory changes such as a uniform alteration in the size of miniature postsynaptic current (mPSC) amplitudes termed synaptic scaling. However, little is known about the impact of synaptic scaling on the function of neural networks in vivo. We used the embryonic zebrafish to address the effect of synaptic scaling on the neural network underlying locomotion. Activity was decreased during development by TTX injection to block action potentials or CNQX injection to block glutamatergic transmission. Alternatively TNFalpha was chronically applied. Recordings from spinal neurons showed that glutamatergic mPSCs scaled up approximately 25% after activity reduction and fortuitously scaled down approximately 20% after TNFalpha treatment, and were unchanged following blockade of neuromuscular activity alone with alpha-bungarotoxin. Regardless of the direction of scaling, immediately following reversal of treatment no chronic effect was distinguishable in motoneuron activity patterns or in swimming behavior. We also acutely induced a similar increase of glutamatergic mPSC amplitudes using cyclothiazide to reduce AMPA receptor desensitization or decrease of glutamatergic mPSC amplitudes using a low concentration of CNQX to partially block AMPA receptors. Though the strength of the motor output was altered, neither chronic nor acute treatments disrupted the patterning of synaptic activity or swimming. Our results show, for the first time, that scaling of glutamatergic synapses can be induced in vivo in the zebrafish and that synaptic patterning is less plastic than synaptic strength during development.


Subject(s)
Motor Neurons/physiology , Swimming/physiology , Synapses/physiology , Action Potentials/drug effects , Animals , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Motor Neurons/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/embryology , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/embryology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/drug effects , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Receptors, AMPA/metabolism , Synapses/drug effects , Synaptic Potentials/drug effects , Synaptic Transmission/drug effects , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism , Zebrafish
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