Abstract

Reciprocal inhibition is a building block in many sensory and motor circuits. We studied the features that underly robustness in reciprocally inhibitory two neuron circuits. We used the dynamic clamp to create reciprocally inhibitory circuits from pharmacologically isolated neurons of the crab stomatogastric ganglion by injecting artificial graded synaptic (ISyn) and hyperpolarization-activated inward (IH) currents. There is a continuum of mechanisms in circuits that generate antiphase oscillations, with 'release' and 'escape' mechanisms at the extremes, and mixed mode oscillations between these extremes. In release, the active neuron primarily controls the off/on transitions. In escape, the inhibited neuron controls the transitions. We characterized the robustness of escape and release circuits to alterations in circuit parameters, temperature, and neuromodulation. We found that escape circuits rely on tight correlations between synaptic and H conductances to generate bursting but are resilient to temperature increase. Release circuits are robust to variations in synaptic and H conductances but fragile to temperature increase. The modulatory current (IMI) restores oscillations in release circuits but has little effect in escape circuits. Perturbations can alter the balance of escape and release mechanisms and can create mixed mode oscillations. We conclude that the same perturbation can have dramatically different effects depending on the circuits' mechanism of operation that may not be observable from basal circuit activity.

Highlights

  • Reciprocal inhibition is ubiquitous in nervous systems, where it has many functions in sensory, motor, and cortical systems

  • On-off transitions largely depend on spike-mediated transmission, because the synaptic threshold is at the very top of the slow-wave depolarization

  • By shifting the synaptic activation curve via dynamic clamp, we change the mechanism of oscillation between escape and release (Figure 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Reciprocal inhibition is ubiquitous in nervous systems, where it has many functions in sensory, motor, and cortical systems. We look at the increased or decreased resilience of oscillators operating in a mixed regime, Some of the theoretical predictions of how oscillations are generated and controlled in reciprocally inhibitory circuits were tested in biological neurons in the crab stomatogastric ganglion (STG) by Sharp et al (1996) and Grashow et al (2009), and in the leech heartbeat circuit (Olypher et al, 2006; Sorensen et al, 2004). These authors used the dynamic clamp, which utilizes a real-time computer interface to simulate nonlinear voltage-dependent synaptic and intrinsic currents in biological cells.

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