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J Physiol Volume 527, Number 1, 55-69, August 15, 2000
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The Journal of Physiology (2000), 527.1, pp. 55-69
© Copyright 2000 The Physiological Society

Functional profile of the giant metacerebral neuron of Helix aspersa: temporal and spatial dynamics of electrical activity in situ

Srdjan Antic*†, Joseph P. Wuskell‡, Leslie Loew‡ and Dejan Zecevic*†

*Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, †Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543 and ‡Department of Physiology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06032, USA

  1. Understanding the biophysical properties of single neurons and how they process information is fundamental to understanding how the brain works. However, action potential initiation and the preceding integration of the synaptic signals in neuronal processes of individual cells are complex and difficult to understand in the absence of detailed, spatially resolved measurements. Multi-site optical recording with voltage-sensitive dyes from individual neurons in situ was used to provide these kinds of measurements. We analysed in detail the pattern of initiation and propagation of spikes evoked synaptically in an identified snail (Helix aspersa) neuron in situ.

  2. Two main spike trigger zones were identified. The trigger zones were activated selectively by different sets of synaptic inputs which also produced different spike propagation patterns.

  3. Synaptically evoked action potentials did not always invade all parts of the neuron. The conduction of the axonal spike was regularly blocked at particular locations on neuronal processes.

  4. The propagating spikes in some axonal branches consistently reversed direction at certain branch points, a phenomenon known as reflection.

  5. These experimental results, when linked to a computer model, could allow a new level of analysis of the electrical structure of single neurons.



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