Literature DB >> 9322160

Regeneration of cercal filiform hair sensory neurons in the first-instar cockroach restores escape behavior.

M Stern1, V L Ediger, C R Gibbon, J M Blagburn, J P Bacon.   

Abstract

Neural regeneration in the escape circuit of the first-instar cockroach is described using behavioral analysis, electrophysiology, intracellular staining, and electron microscopy. Each of the two filiform hairs on each of the animal's cerci is innervated by a single sensory neuron, which specifically synapses with a set of giant interneurons (GIs) in the terminal ganglion. These trigger a directed escape run. Severing the sensory axons causes them to degenerate and perturbs escape behavior, which is restored to near normal after 4-6 days. Within this time, afferents regenerate and reestablish arborizations in the terminal ganglion. In most cases, regenerating afferents enter the cercal glomerulus and re-form most of the specific monosynaptic connections they acquired during embryogenesis, although their morphology deviates markedly from normal; these animals reestablish near normal escape behavior. In a few cases, regenerating afferents remain within the cercus or bypass the cercal glomerulus, and thereby fail to re-form synapses with GIs; these animals continue to exhibit perturbed escape behavior. We conclude that in most cases, specific synapses are reestablished and appropriate escape behavior is restored. This regeneration system therefore provides a tractable model for the establishment of synaptic specificity in a simple neuronal circuit.

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9322160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurobiol        ISSN: 0022-3034


  9 in total

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Review 4.  Animal escapology II: escape trajectory case studies.

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8.  Scanning laser optical tomography resolves structural plasticity during regeneration in an insect brain.

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  9 in total

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