Complementary interactions between command-like interneurons that function to activate and specify motor programs

Jin Sheng Wu, Nan Wang, Michael J. Siniscalchi, Matthew H. Perkins, Yu Tong Zheng, Wei Yu, Song An Chen, Ruo Nan Jia, Jia Wei Gu, Yi Qing Qian, Yang Ye, Ferdinand S. Vilim, Elizabeth C. Cropper, Klaudiusz R. Weiss, Jian Jing

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Motor activity is often initiated by a population of command-like interneurons. Command-like interneurons that reliably drive programs have received the most attention, so little is known about how less reliable command-like interneurons may contribute to program generation. We study two electrically coupled interneurons, cerebral-buccal interneuron-2 (CBI-2) and CBI-11, which activate feeding motor programs in the mollusk Aplysia californica. Earlier work indicated that, in rested preparations, CBI-2, a powerful activator of programs, can trigger ingestive and egestive programs. CBI-2 reliably generated ingestive patterns only when it was repeatedly stimulated. The ability of CBI-2 to trigger motor activity has been attributed to the two program-promoting peptides it contains, FCAP and CP2. Here, we show that CBI-11 differs from CBI-2 in that it contains FCAP but not CP2. Furthermore, it is weak in its ability to drive programs. On its own, CBI-11 is therefore less effective as a program activator. When it is successful, however, CBI-11 is an effective specifier of motor activity; that is, it drives mostly ingestive programs. Importantly, we found that CBI-2 and CBI-11 complement each other's actions. First, prestimulation of CBI-2 enhanced the ability of CBI-11 to drive programs. This effect appears to be partly mediated by CP2. Second, coactivation of CBI-11 with CBI-2 makes CBI-2 programs immediately ingestive. This effect may be mediated by specific actions that CBI-11 exerts on pattern-generating interneurons. Therefore, different classes of command-like neurons in a motor network may make distinct, but potentially complementary, contributions as either activators or specifiers of motor activity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6510-6521
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume34
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Aplysia
  • Central pattern generator
  • Command neurons
  • Electrical coupling
  • Feeding
  • Population coding

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