| Literature DB >> 33587033 |
Mária Ashaber1, Yusuke Tomina1, Pegah Kassraian1, Eric A Bushong2, William B Kristan2, Mark H Ellisman3,4, Daniel A Wagenaar1.
Abstract
Dorsal Excitor motor neuron DE-3 in the medicinal leech plays three very different dynamical roles in three different behaviors. Without rewiring its anatomical connectivity, how can a motor neuron dynamically switch roles to play appropriate roles in various behaviors? We previously used voltage-sensitive dye imaging to record from DE-3 and most other neurons in the leech segmental ganglion during (fictive) swimming, crawling, and local-bend escape (Tomina and Wagenaar, 2017). Here, we repeated that experiment, then re-imaged the same ganglion using serial blockface electron microscopy and traced DE-3's processes. Further, we traced back the processes of DE-3's presynaptic partners to their respective somata. This allowed us to analyze the relationship between circuit anatomy and the activity patterns it sustains. We found that input synapses important for all the behaviors were widely distributed over DE-3's branches, yet that functional clusters were different during (fictive) swimming vs. crawling.Entities:
Keywords: Hirudo verbana; connectome; motor behaviors; neural circuit; neuroscience; serial blockface electron microscopy; voltage-sensitive dye imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33587033 PMCID: PMC7954528 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.61881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140