Abstract

The electrically coupled buccal ganglion neurons 4R and 4L of the snail, Helisoma, display predictable plasticity. The strength of the electronic synapse between them increases significantly following axotomy. Synaptic strength was assayed by measurements of electrical coupling coefficients and by assessment of dye coupling (passage of dye into the uninjected neuron) following injection of Lucifer Yellow CH into one neuron. Within 3 to 5 days, axotomy induced an increase in electrical coupling coefficients between neurons 4R and 4L from 0.54 +/- 0.11 (n = 13) in normal preparations to 0.72 +/- 0.14 (n = 24). A parallel axotomy-induced increase in the probability of dye coupling occurred. Only 27% (n = 27) of normal neuron 4 pairs were dye coupled, compared with 87% (n = 15) of axotomized neuronal pairs. Irrespective of treatment, electrical and dye measurements in the same neuron 4 pairs showed a consistent correlation between the magnitude of the electrical coupling coefficients and the probability of detectable dye coupling. No dye coupling was observed in neuronal pairs with electrical coupling coefficients less than 0.50. Dye coupling always occurred when coupling coefficients were greater than 0.70. Sixty-seven percent of neuronal pairs with intermediate coupling (0.50 to 0.70) coefficients displayed dye coupling. The results show that axotomy evokes a predictable enhancement of communication at an "identified" electronic synapse and suggests that electrical and dye coupling are mediated by similar mechanisms.

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