Abstract

The crab Cancer borealis undergoes large daily fluctuations in environmental temperature (8–24°C) and must maintain appropriate neural function in the face of this perturbation. In the pyloric circuit of the crab stomatogastric ganglion, we pharmacologically isolated the pacemaker kernel (the AB and PD neurons) and characterized its behavior in response to temperature ramps from 7°C to 31°C. For moderate temperatures, the pacemaker displayed a frequency-temperature curve statistically indistinguishable from that of the intact circuit, and like the intact circuit maintained a constant duty cycle. At high temperatures (above 23°C), a variety of different behaviors were seen: in some preparations the pacemaker increased in frequency, in some it slowed, and in many preparations the pacemaker stopped oscillating (“crashed”). Furthermore, these crashes seemed to fall into two qualitatively different classes. Additionally, the animal-to-animal variability in frequency increased at high temperatures. We used a series of Morris-Lecar mathematical models to gain insight into these phenomena. The biophysical components of the final model have temperature sensitivities similar to those found in nature, and can crash via two qualitatively different mechanisms that resemble those observed experimentally. The crash type is determined by the precise parameters of the model at the reference temperature, 11°C, which could explain why some preparations seem to crash in one way and some in another. Furthermore, even models with very similar behavior at the reference temperature diverge greatly at high temperatures, resembling the experimental observations.

Highlights

  • Neuronal oscillators depend on the balanced interaction of many voltage-dependent currents to produce functional output

  • Because the temperature sensitivities of different ion channels are generally different, this variability presents a potential challenge to maintaining stable oscillatory function over an extended temperature range, as is necessary for neuronal oscillators found in coldblooded animals

  • We studied the pyloric rhythm of the crab, Cancer borealis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Neuronal oscillators depend on the balanced interaction of many voltage-dependent currents to produce functional output. The cardiac action potential is a result of the voltageand time- dependent activation and inactivation of many different ion channels [1]. Temperature is a global perturbation that influences the conductance, activation, and inactivation of all ion channels [5]. Because the temperature sensitivities of different ion channels are generally different, this variability presents a potential challenge to maintaining stable oscillatory function over an extended temperature range, as is necessary for neuronal oscillators found in coldblooded animals. Very similar patterns of neuronal bursting can arise from different balances of inward and outward currents [7,10]. Even if temperature alters the relative balance of inward and outward currents in a neuronal oscillator, this divergence might not immediately lead to a loss of robust oscillation

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call