Publication | Open Access
Single neuron control over a complex motor program.
117
Citations
27
References
1996
Year
Motor LearningMotor ControlComplex Motor ProgramSwim Motor ProgramSocial SciencesMotor ProgramNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsMotor NeurophysiologyMotor NeuroscienceMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlSensorimotor IntegrationNervous SystemBiologyComputational NeuroscienceMotor SystemMotor Behavior ControlNeuronal NetworkNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemRhythmic Escape Swim
While there are many instances of single neurons that can drive rhythmic stimulus-elicited motor programs, such neurons have seldom been found to be necessary for motor program function. In the isolated central nervous system of the marine mollusc Tritonia diomedea, brief stimulation (1 sec) of a peripheral nerve activates an interneuronal central pattern generator that produces the long-lasting (approximately 30-60 sec) motor program underlying the animal's rhythmic escape swim. Here, we identify a single interneuron, DRI (for dorsal ramp interneuron), that (i) conveys the sensory information from this stimulus to the swim central pattern generator, (ii) elicits the swim motor program when driven with intracellular stimulation, and (iii) blocks the depolarizing "ramp" input to the central pattern generator, and consequently the motor program itself, when hyperpolarized during the nerve stimulus. Because most of the sensory information appears to be funneled through this one neuron as it enters the pattern generator, DRI presents a striking example of single neuron control over a complex motor circuit.
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