Abstract

Appetitive operant conditioning, a form of associative learning, produces a long-lasting switch in the mollusk Aplysia’s food-seeking behavior from irregular, impulsive-like radula biting movements into stereotyped, compulsive-like recurrences of this cyclic act [1]. Three bilateral pairs of neurons (B63, B65, and B30) in the feeding central pattern generator (CPG) circuit, found in the buccal ganglia, are initiators of each radula bite motor pattern. Using isolated ganglia from naive and operantly conditioned animals, it was previously found that learning increased both the frequency and regularity of spontaneous bursting activity in these three pairs of neurons. This plasticity was correlated with an increase in electrical coupling among these cells, together with an increased excitability and a change in their intrinsic oscillatory membrane properties [2]. In the present study, we explored the role that changes in electrical coupling between the 6 neurons might play in the operant learning-induced regularization and acceleration of biting motor pattern genesis. In isolated buccal ganglia, we implemented a dynamic clamp procedure during fictive biting activity to artificially increase the electrical coupling among the identified motor pattern initiating neurons. In preparations which spontaneously generated irregular biting motor patterns, artificially increasing the coupling among groups of any 3-4 (out of the 6) neurons immediately switched the network from an irregular to a regular burst pattern. Conversely, in preparations in which the motor pattern-initiating cells spontaneously generated rhythmic motor output, a decrease in their electrical coupling switched the cell’s bursting activity and radula motor pattern genesis from a rhythmic to an arrhythmic mode. These changes were not correlated to a change either in resting membrane potential of the recorded cells or in the frequency of their impulse bursts. These data therefore suggest a causal relationship between the strength of electrical coupling and the temporal regularity of motor pattern genesis underlying each radula cycle, while a separate mechanism is likely to account for the changes in motor pattern frequency. Plasticity induced by operant learning in electrical connectivity within a subset of CPG neurons, may thereby provide a cellular substrate for the behavioral switch between impulsive to compulsive motor actions in Aplysia as well as in more complex animals.

Highlights

  • We implemented a dynamic clamp procedure during fictive biting activity to artificially increase the electrical coupling among the identified motor pattern initiating neurons

  • In preparations in which the motor pattern-initiating cells spontaneously generated rhythmic motor output, a decrease in their electrical coupling switched the cell’s bursting activity and radula motor pattern genesis from a rhythmic to an arrhythmic mode. These changes were not correlated to a change either in resting membrane potential of the recorded cells or in the frequency of their impulse bursts. These data suggest a causal relationship between the strength of electrical coupling and the temporal regularity of motor pattern genesis underlying each radula cycle, while a separate mechanism is likely to account for the changes in motor pattern frequency

  • Plasticity induced by operant learning in electrical connectivity within a subset of central pattern generator (CPG) neurons, may thereby provide a cellular substrate for the behavioral switch between impulsive to compulsive motor actions in Aplysia as well as in more complex animals

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Summary

Introduction

We implemented a dynamic clamp procedure during fictive biting activity to artificially increase the electrical coupling among the identified motor pattern initiating neurons.

Results
Conclusion
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