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      Synaptic Augmentation Contributes to Environment-Driven Regulation of the Aplysia Siphon-Withdrawal Reflex

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          Abstract

          This research shows that short-term synaptic plasticity can play a critical role in shaping the behavioral response to environmental change. In Aplysia, exposure to turbulent environments produces a stable reduction in the duration of the siphon-withdrawal reflex (SWR) and the responsiveness of siphon motor neurons. Recovery takes >1 min after a brief (10 sec-5 min) exposure but <1 min after a long (10 min) exposure. Here we demonstrate that (1) in-turbulence and post-turbulence phases of regulation depend on different cellular processes and (2) the post-turbulence phase of regulation is mediated by augmentation (AUG), an activity-dependent form of short-term synaptic plasticity. In reduced preparations (tail, siphon, and CNS), we show that treatment with 100 μ m d-tubocurarine has no effect on in-turbulence regulation but blocks up to 90% of post-turbulence regulation, indicating that these phases of regulation are mediated by distinct cellular process. We then show that (1) turbulence induces activity in L30 inhibitory interneurons, (2) this activation produces AUG that lasts 1 min after a brief exposure to turbulence, and (3) manipulations that attenuate L30 AUG also attenuate regulation after brief turbulence. We also found that long (10 min) exposures to turbulence do not produce a post-turbulence phase of regulation because L30 activity declines over the course of a long turbulence exposure, leading to the decay of AUG before turbulence offset. Our results demonstrate a specific behavioral function of AUG and show how interactions between cellular processes can confer temporal sensitivity in the network regulation of behavior.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Neurosci
          J. Neurosci
          jneuro
          The Journal of Neuroscience
          Society for Neuroscience
          0270-6474
          1529-2401
          17 December 2003
          : 23
          : 37
          : 11611-11620
          Affiliations
          Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202
          Article
          PMC6740963 PMC6740963 6740963 02311611
          10.1523/JNEUROSCI.23-37-11611.2003
          6740963
          14684863
          55219cfe-c6c4-4456-bc94-12435be1018d
          Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/2311611-10.00/0
          History
          : 24 September 2003
          : 26 June 2003
          : 23 September 2003
          Categories
          Cellular/Molecular
          Custom metadata
          11611
          ARTICLE

          plasticity,short-term enhancement,network,interneuron,adaptation,inhibition

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