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1.
Front Neurol ; 9: 404, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29922219

ABSTRACT

Vestibulo-ocular reflexes (VORs) rely on neuronal computations that transform vestibular sensory signals into spatio-temporally appropriate extraocular motor commands. The motoneuronal discharge for contractions of the superior oblique eye muscle during linear translation derives from a utricular epithelial sector that is spatially aligned with the pulling direction of this muscle. In Xenopus laevis, the alignment is gradually achieved during larval development and requires motion-related semicircular canal afferent activity. Here, we studied the origin of semicircular canal and utricular signals responsible for the establishment and maturation of the extraocular motor response vector. Experiments were conducted on semi-intact preparations of Xenopus tadpoles before and after unilateral transection of the VIIIth nerve and in preparations of animals in which semicircular canal formation was prevented on one side by the injection of hyaluronidase into the otic capsule prior to the establishment of the tubular structures. Unilateral VIIIth nerve sections revealed that the excitation underlying the contraction of the superior oblique eye muscle during horizontal linear acceleration and clockwise/counter-clockwise roll motion derives exclusively from the utricle and the posterior semicircular canal on the ipsilateral side. In contrast, the developmental constriction of the otolith response vector depends on signals from the posterior semicircular canal on the contralateral side. These latter signals suppress directionally incorrect components that derive from the utricular sector perpendicular to the superior oblique eye muscle. This directional tuning complies with a stabilization of spatially correct utricular inputs that are aligned with the extraocular motor target muscle. In addition, misaligned signals are concurrently suppressed by semicircular canal-related commissural pathways from the contralateral side and through local interneuronal inhibitory circuits within the ipsilateral vestibular nuclei.

2.
J Neurol ; 265(Suppl 1): 18-25, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29556714

ABSTRACT

Vestibulo-ocular reflexes (VOR) are mediated by three-neuronal brainstem pathways that transform semicircular canal and otolith sensory signals into motor commands for the contraction of spatially specific sets of eye muscles. The vestibular excitation and inhibition of extraocular motoneurons underlying this reflex is reciprocally organized and allows coordinated activation of particular eye muscles and concurrent relaxation of their antagonistic counterparts. Here, we demonstrate in isolated preparations of Xenopus laevis tadpoles that the discharge modulation of superior oblique motoneurons during cyclic head motion derives from an alternating excitation and inhibition. The latter component is mediated exclusively by GABA, at variance with the glycinergic inhibitory component in lateral rectus motoneurons. The different pharmacological profile of the inhibition correlates with rhombomere-specific origins of vestibulo-ocular projection neurons and the complementary segmental abundance of GABAergic and glycinergic vestibular neurons. The evolutionary conserved rhombomeric topography of vestibulo-ocular projections makes it likely that a similar pharmacological organization of inhibitory VOR neurons as reported here for anurans is also implemented in mammalian species including humans.


Subject(s)
Motor Neurons/drug effects , Neural Inhibition/drug effects , Neurotransmitter Agents/pharmacology , Oculomotor Muscles/innervation , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/drug effects , Action Potentials/drug effects , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Glycine/metabolism , Head Movements/drug effects , Head Movements/physiology , Larva , Motion Perception/drug effects , Motion Perception/physiology , Motor Neurons/physiology , Neural Inhibition/physiology , Pyridazines/pharmacology , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/physiology , Semicircular Canals/drug effects , Semicircular Canals/physiology , Strychnine/pharmacology , Tegmentum Mesencephali/drug effects , Tegmentum Mesencephali/physiology , Xenopus laevis , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
3.
Arch Toxicol ; 92(1): 337-346, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28932886

ABSTRACT

The chemical agent sulfur mustard (SM) causes erythema, skin blisters, ulcerations, and delayed wound healing. It is accepted that the underlying molecular toxicology is based on DNA alkylation. With an expected delay, DNA damage causes impairment of protein biosynthesis and disturbance of cell division. However, using the cockroach model Blaptica dubia, the presented results show that alkylating compounds provoke immediate behavior responses along with fast changes in the electrical field potential (EFP) of neurons, suggesting that lesions of DNA are probably not the only effect of alkylating compounds. Blaptica dubia was challenged with SM or 2-chloroethyl-ethyl sulfide (CEES). Acute toxicity was objectified by a disability score. Physiological behavior responses (antennae pullback reflex, escape attempts, and grooming) were monitored after exposure. To estimate the impact of alkylating agents on neuronal activity, EFP recordings of the antennae and the thoracic ganglion were performed. After contact to neat SM, a pullback reflex of the antennae was the first observation. Subsequently, a striking escape behavior occured which was characterized by persistent movement of the legs. In addition, an instantaneous processing of the electrical firing pattern from the antennae to the descending ganglia was detectable. Remarkably, comparing the toxicity of the applied alkylating agents, effects induced by CEES were much more pronounced compared to SM. In summary, our findings document immediate effects of B. dubia after exposure to alkylating substances. These fast responses cannot be interpreted as a consequence of DNA alkylation. Therefore, the dogma that DNA alkylation is the exclusive cause for SM toxicity has to be questioned.


Subject(s)
Arthropod Antennae/drug effects , Cockroaches/drug effects , Cockroaches/physiology , Mustard Gas/analogs & derivatives , Mustard Gas/toxicity , Alkylating Agents/toxicity , Animals , Arthropod Antennae/physiology , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Chemical Warfare Agents/toxicity , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electrophysiology/methods , Extremities , Flight, Animal/drug effects , Ganglia, Invertebrate/drug effects , Ganglia, Invertebrate/metabolism , Mustard Gas/administration & dosage
4.
Front Neural Circuits ; 10: 91, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27877114

ABSTRACT

Vestibulo-ocular reflexes (VOR) ensure gaze stability during locomotion and passively induced head/body movements. In precocial vertebrates such as amphibians, vestibular reflexes are required very early at the onset of locomotor activity. While the formation of inner ears and the assembly of sensory-motor pathways is largely completed soon after hatching, angular and translational/tilt VOR display differential functional onsets and mature with different time courses. Otolith-derived eye movements appear immediately after hatching, whereas the appearance and progressive amelioration of semicircular canal-evoked eye movements is delayed and dependent on the acquisition of sufficiently large semicircular canal diameters. Moreover, semicircular canal functionality is also required to tune the initially omnidirectional otolith-derived VOR. The tuning is due to a reinforcement of those vestibulo-ocular connections that are co-activated by semicircular canal and otolith inputs during natural head/body motion. This suggests that molecular mechanisms initially guide the basic ontogenetic wiring, whereas semicircular canal-dependent activity is required to establish the spatio-temporal specificity of the reflex. While a robust VOR is activated during passive head/body movements, locomotor efference copies provide the major source for compensatory eye movements during tail- and limb-based swimming of larval and adult frogs. The integration of active/passive motion-related signals for gaze stabilization occurs in central vestibular neurons that are arranged as segmentally iterated functional groups along rhombomere 1-8. However, at variance with the topographic maps of most other sensory systems, the sensory-motor transformation of motion-related signals occurs in segmentally specific neuronal groups defined by the extraocular motor output targets.


Subject(s)
Amphibians/growth & development , Eye Movements/physiology , Head Movements/physiology , Motor Neurons/physiology , Otolithic Membrane/physiology , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/physiology , Semicircular Canals/physiology , Animals
5.
J Neurosci ; 36(35): 9097-110, 2016 08 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27581452

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) uses modulated currents to evoke neuronal activity in vestibular endorgans in the absence of head motion. GVS is typically used for a characterization of vestibular pathologies; for studies on the vestibular influence of gaze, posture, and locomotion; and for deciphering the sensory-motor transformation underlying these behaviors. At variance with the widespread use of this method, basic aspects such as the activated cellular substrate at the sensory periphery or the comparability to motion-induced neuronal activity patterns are still disputed. Using semi-intact preparations of Xenopus laevis tadpoles, we determined the cellular substrate and the spatiotemporal specificity of GVS-evoked responses and compared sinusoidal GVS-induced activity patterns with motion-induced responses in all neuronal elements along the vestibulo-ocular pathway. As main result, we found that, despite the pharmacological block of glutamatergic hair cell transmission by combined bath-application of NMDA (7-chloro-kynurenic acid) and AMPA (CNQX) receptor blockers, GVS-induced afferent spike activity persisted. However, the amplitude modulation was reduced by ∼30%, suggesting that both hair cells and vestibular afferent fibers are normally recruited by GVS. Systematic alterations of electrode placement with respect to bilateral semicircular canal pairs or alterations of the bipolar stimulus phase timing yielded unique activity patterns in extraocular motor nerves, compatible with a spatially and temporally specific activation of vestibulo-ocular reflexes in distinct planes. Despite the different GVS electrode placement in semi-intact X. laevis preparations and humans and the more global activation of vestibular endorgans by the latter approach, this method is suitable to imitate head/body motion in both circumstances. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Galvanic vestibular stimulation is used frequently in clinical practice to test the functionality of the sense of balance. The outcome of the test that relies on the activation of eye movements by electrical stimulation of vestibular organs in the inner ear helps to dissociate vestibular impairments that cause vertigo and imbalance in patients. This study uses an amphibian model to investigate at the cellular level the underlying mechanism on which this method depends. The outcome of this translational research unequivocally revealed the cellular substrate at the vestibular sensory periphery that is activated by electrical currents, as well as the spatiotemporal specificity of the evoked eye movements, thus facilitating the interpretation of clinical test results.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Electric Stimulation , Motor Neurons/physiology , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/physiology , Vestibular Nerve/physiology , 6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione/pharmacology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Eye Movements/physiology , In Vitro Techniques , Kynurenic Acid/pharmacology , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/drug effects , Xenopus laevis
6.
Dev Neurobiol ; 75(10): 1051-67, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25266079

ABSTRACT

Gaze stabilization during head/body movements is achieved to a large extent by vestibular-evoked compensatory eye movements. These reflexes derive from semicircular canal and otolith organs and depend on the transformation of the respective sensory signals into extraocular motor commands. To elicit directionally and dynamically appropriate compensatory eye movements, extraocular motoneurons require spatiotemporally specific inputs from semicircular canals and regions of the utricular epithelium with matching directional sensitivity. The ontogenetic establishment and maturation of the directional tuning of otolith inputs in extraocular motoneurons was studied in Xenopus laevis tadpoles. In young larvae at stage 46-48, superior oblique (SO) extraocular motoneurons receive omnidirectional utricular signals during horizontal translational motion, indicating an absence of spatial tuning. In contrast, in older larvae beyond stage 49 these motoneurons were activated by directionally more restricted otolith inputs with an increasingly enhanced spatial tuning until stage 53. This developmental process limited the origin of otolith signals to a utricular epithelial sector with a hair cell sensitivity that is coaligned with the pulling direction of the SO eye muscle. The maturation of the otolith response vector was abolished by enzymatic prevention of semicircular canal formation in postembryonic tadpoles at stage 44, suggesting that functionally intact semicircular canals are causally responsible for the observed directional tuning of utricular responses. A likely mechanism by which semicircular canals might influence the tuning of the otolith responses includes stabilization of coactivated and centrally converging sensory signals from semicircular canal and spatially aligned epithelial utricular regions during natural head/body motion.


Subject(s)
Eye Movements/physiology , Motor Neurons/cytology , Nerve Net/growth & development , Otolithic Membrane/growth & development , Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular/physiology , Semicircular Canals/growth & development , Xenopus laevis/physiology , Animals
7.
PLoS One ; 9(7): e101606, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24984086

ABSTRACT

Anesthetics are drugs that reversibly relieve pain, decrease body movements and suppress neuronal activity. Most drugs only cover one of these effects; for instance, analgesics relieve pain but fail to block primary fiber responses to noxious stimuli. Alternately, paralytic drugs block synaptic transmission at neuromuscular junctions, thereby effectively paralyzing skeletal muscles. Thus, both analgesics and paralytics each accomplish one effect, but fail to singularly account for all three. Tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222) is structurally similar to benzocaine, a typical anesthetic for anamniote vertebrates, but contains a sulfate moiety rendering this drug more hydrophilic. MS-222 is used as anesthetic in poikilothermic animals such as fish and amphibians. However, it is often argued that MS-222 is only a hypnotic drug and its ability to block neural activity has been questioned. This prompted us to evaluate the potency and dynamics of MS-222-induced effects on neuronal firing of sensory and motor nerves alongside a defined motor behavior in semi-intact in vitro preparations of Xenopus laevis tadpoles. Electrophysiological recordings of extraocular motor discharge and both spontaneous and evoked mechanosensory nerve activity were measured before, during and after administration of MS-222, then compared to benzocaine and a known paralytic, pancuronium. Both MS-222 and benzocaine, but not pancuronium caused a dose-dependent, reversible blockade of extraocular motor and sensory nerve activity. These results indicate that MS-222 as benzocaine blocks the activity of both sensory and motor nerves compatible with the mechanistic action of effective anesthetics, indicating that both caine-derivates are effective as single-drug anesthetics for surgical interventions in anamniotes.


Subject(s)
Aminobenzoates/pharmacology , Anesthetics/pharmacology , Evoked Potentials/drug effects , Motor Neurons/physiology , Sensory Receptor Cells/physiology , Animals , Benzocaine/pharmacology , Larva , Xenopus laevis
8.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22976940

ABSTRACT

Xenopus laevis employs mechano-sensory lateral lines to, for instance, capture arthropods on the surface of turbid waters with poor visibility based on incoming wave signals. To characterise central representations of surface waves emitted from different locations, responses to several wave parameters were extracellularly recorded across brainstem, midbrain and thalamic areas. Overall, 339 of 411 statistically analysed responses showed significantly altered spike rates during the presentation of surface waves. Of these units, 45.1% were obtained in the torus semicircularis including its laminar subnucleus (23.3%) that is known to process auditory cues. Wave parameters contributing to central object representations were indicated by response rates that systematically varied with amplitude (76.3% of 160 tested units), frequency (74.4% of 270 tested units), source angle (93.7% of 79 tested units), or source distance (63.8% of 218 tested units). Map-like parameter representations were rather diffuse, yet an increased fraction of units tuned to frontal source angles was observed at deeper tissue layers (>180 µm), and an increased fraction of best neuronal responses to low wave frequencies (≤25 Hz) at rostral midbrain sections. Responses to wave frequencies remained largely robust across tested unit samples independent of source angles, and distances (N = 62). In comparison, spatial response characteristics seemed fragile across different wave frequencies in 68.3% of 41 recordings.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology , Lateral Line System/physiology , Mechanotransduction, Cellular/physiology , Models, Neurological , Water Movements , Xenopus laevis/physiology , Animals , Computer Simulation
9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18633622

ABSTRACT

Aquatic predators like Xenopus laevis exploit mechano-sensory lateral lines to localise prey on the water surface by its wave emissions. In terms of distance, hypothetically, the source of a concentric wave could be centrally represented based on wave curvatures: for Xenopus, we present a first sample of 98 extracellularly recorded brainstem and midbrain responses to waves with curvatures ranging from 22.2-11.1 m(-1). At the frog, concurrently, wave amplitudes and their spectral composition were kept stable. Notably, 61% of 98 units displayed curvature-dependent spike rates, suggesting that wave curvatures could support an extraction of source distances in the amphibian brain.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Lateral Line System/physiology , Mechanotransduction, Cellular/physiology , Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Xenopus laevis/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain Stem/anatomy & histology , Brain Stem/physiology , Exploratory Behavior/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Species Specificity , Swimming/physiology , Xenopus laevis/anatomy & histology
10.
Eur J Neurosci ; 23(3): 729-44, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16487154

ABSTRACT

Many aquatic vertebrates use mechano-sensory lateral lines to decipher water movements. The peripheral and central organization of the lateral line system has much in common with the auditory system. Therefore, it was hypothesized that the information processing of both systems could be related. Analogous to acoustic objects, for instance, object representations along the central lateral line pathway must be generated from patterns of particle motion across peripheral receivers. Thus, the lateral line offers insight into key features of neural computation beyond a specific sensory system. Here, central processing of water surface waves was described in the African clawed frog which depends on wave signals for prey detection, recognition and localization. Neural responses to surface wave stimuli were recorded in the brainstem and midbrain of Xenopus. A total of 109 units displayed either excitatory or inhibitory responses to surface waves. The response pattern distribution differed significantly across the optic tectum and torus semicircularis magnocellularis (chi-square test, P < 0.05). Stimulus frequencies from 10 to 40 Hz were represented equally across lateral line nuclei but best frequencies were systematically distributed along the rostrocaudal axis of the midbrain (chi-square test, P < 0.05). Forty-one percent of 102 widely distributed units phase locked significantly to stimulus frequencies (Rayleigh test, P < 0.05; vector strength > 0.3) and 41% of 39 tested units featured non-monotone rate-level functions. These neurones were registered mainly in the dorsal tectum and magnocellular torus semicircularis (chi-square test, P < 0.05). Across all tested nuclei, 16 of 17 discreetly distributed units showed a directional response to spatial stimulation. The results suggest midbrain subdivisions with respect to processing of stimulus timing, frequency and amplitude.


Subject(s)
Mesencephalon/cytology , Motion , Neurons/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Perception/physiology , Xenopus laevis/physiology , Animals , Auditory Pathways/cytology , Auditory Pathways/physiology , Behavior, Animal , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Neural Inhibition/physiology , Neurons/ultrastructure , Time Factors , Water
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