Cellular and synaptic morphology of a feeding motor circuit in Aplysia californica

Abstract
The cellular and synaptic morphology of a component of the feeding motor circuit in Aplysia californica was examined with light and electron microscopic techniques. The circuit consists of a pair of inhibitory premotor interneurons, B4 and B5, as well as two motoneurons, B15 and B16, which innervate the accessory radula closer muscle. The neurons have wide, varicose arborizations in the buccal ganglion neuropil. All four of these neurons are cholinergic, and in addition, B15 contains immunoreactivity to sera raised against small cardioactive peptide B. Varicose processes in the accessory radula closer muscle are immunoreactive with antisera against several neuropeptides. We identified specific neuromuscular junctions by visualizing horseradish peroxidase uptake in recycled synaptic vesicles. Direct innervation of the accessory radula closer muscle by B15 and B16 is demonstrated by experiments in which horseradish peroxidase is transported from motoneuronal soma to the terminals on muscle fibers. In addition, specific synaptic contacts between B4 and B5 and each of the motoneurons are observed in the buccal ganglion neuropil. Finally, multiple contacts consistent with peptidergic, serotoninergic, and cholinergic synapses are made onto the neurons, suggesting that a variety of transmitters modulate motor output at each level of the hierarchical circuit. These results support the physiological evidence suggesting the involvement of neuropeptides as well as “classical” transmitters in the modulation of circuitry governing feeding behavior in Aplysia.