Electrical Transmission among Neurons in the Buccal Ganglion of a Mollusc, Navanax inermis
Open Access
- 1 April 1970
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 55 (4), 484-496
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.55.4.484
Abstract
The opisthobranch mollusc, Navanax, is carnivorous and cannibalistic. Prey are swallowed whole by way of a sudden expansion of the pharynx. The buccal ganglion which controls this sucking action was isolated and bathed in seawater. Attention was focused upon 10 identifiable cells visible on the ganglion's rostral side. Two cells were observed simultaneously, and each was penetrated with two glass microelectrodes, one for polarizing the membrane and the other for recording membrane potential variations. The coupling coefficients for direct current flow and action potentials of several identified cells were tabulated. Attenuation was essentially independent of the direction of current flow, but depended upon the relative size of the directly and indirectly polarized cells. The attenuation of subthreshold sinusoidally varying voltages increased with frequency above about 1 Hz. The coupling coefficient for spikes was lower than for DC due to greater high frequency attenuation. There is considerable similarity in the spontaneous PSP's of all cells, which is not due to the electrical coupling but to input from a common source. The 10 cells were not chemically interconnected but some were electrically connected to interneurons which fed back chemically mediated PSP's. The feedback can be negative or positive depending upon the membrane potential of the postsynaptic cell. We conclude that electrical coupling among the 10 cells plays a minor role in sudden pharyngeal contractions but that the dual electrical-chemical coupling with interneurons may be important in this respect.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electrical transmission mediated by an identified cholinergic neuron of AplysiaLife Sciences, 1969
- Polyphasic Synaptic ActivityPublished by Elsevier ,1969
- Physiology and ultrastructure of electrotonic junctions. IV. Medullary electromotor nuclei in gymnotid fish.Journal of Neurophysiology, 1967
- Physiology and ultrastructure of electrotonic junctions. I. Supramedullary neurons.Journal of Neurophysiology, 1967
- PHYSIOLOGY OF ELECTROTONIC JUNCTIONS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966
- Anomalous rectification in the metacerebral giant cells and its consequences for synaptic transmissionThe Journal of Physiology, 1966
- ELECTROTONIC TRANSMISSION BETWEEN TWO NERVE CELLS IN LEECH GANGLIONJournal of Neurophysiology, 1962
- Modulation of Activity of One Neuron by Subthreshold Slow Potentials in Another in Lobster Cardiac GanglionThe Journal of general physiology, 1960
- [Non-synaptic interaction between adjacent neurons of abdominal ganglia in Aplysia].1959