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1.
Curr Biol ; 34(12): R568-R570, 2024 Jun 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38889677

ABSTRACT

Experimental, modeling, and robotic research shows that switching of sea stars from crawling to bouncing gaits does not require centralized neural control. Bouncing can instead arise cooperatively, with synchronization of sea star tube feet occurring by locally acting mechanisms alone.


Subject(s)
Starfish , Animals , Starfish/physiology , Extremities/physiology , Gait/physiology , Locomotion/physiology , Robotics
3.
Curr Biol ; 32(17): 3847-3854.e3, 2022 09 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35896118

ABSTRACT

Producing context-appropriate motor acts requires integrating multiple sensory modalities. Presynaptic inhibition of proprioceptive afferent neurons1-4 and afferents of different modalities targeting the same motor neurons (MNs)5-7 underlies some of this integration. However, in most systems, an interneuronal network is interposed between sensory afferents and MNs. How these networks contribute to this integration, particularly at single-neuron resolution, is little understood. Context-specific integration of load and movement sensory inputs occurs in the stick insect locomotory system,6,8-12 and both inputs feed into a network of premotor nonspiking interneurons (NSIs).8 We analyzed how load altered movement signal processing in the stick insect femur-tibia (FTi) joint control system by tracing the interaction of FTi movement13-15 (femoral chordotonal organ [fCO]) and load13,15,16 (tibial campaniform sensilla [CS]) signals through the NSI network to the slow extensor tibiae (SETi) MN, the extensor MN primarily active in non-walking animals.17-19 On the afferent level, load reduced movement signal gain by presynaptic inhibition. In the NSI network, graded responses to movement and load inputs summed nonlinearly, increasing the gain of NSIs opposing movement-induced reflexes and thus decreasing the SETi and extensor tibiae muscle movement reflex responses. Gain modulation was movement-parameter specific and required presynaptic inhibition. These data suggest that gain changes in distributed premotor networks, specifically the relative weighting of antagonistic pathways, could be a general mechanism by which multiple sensory modalities are integrated to generate context-appropriate motor activity.


Subject(s)
Insecta , Proprioception , Animals , Insecta/physiology , Locomotion , Motor Neurons/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Reflex/physiology
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(31): e2122563119, 2022 08 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35858384

ABSTRACT

The elephant's trunk is multifunctional: It must be flexible to wrap around vegetation, but tough to knock down trees and resist attack. How can one appendage satisfy both constraints? In this combined experimental and theoretical study, we challenged African elephants to reach far-away objects with only horizontal extensions of their trunk. Surprisingly, the trunk does not extend uniformly, but instead exhibits a dorsal "joint" that stretches 15% more than the corresponding ventral section. Using material testing with the skin of a deceased elephant, we show that the asymmetry is due in part to patterns of the skin. The dorsal skin is folded and 15% more pliable than the wrinkled ventral skin. Skin folds protect the dorsal section and stretch to facilitate downward wrapping, the most common gripping style when picking up items. The elephant's skin is also sufficiently stiff to influence its mechanics: At the joint, the skin requires 13 times more energy to stretch than the corresponding length of muscle. The use of wrinkles and folds to modulate stiffness may provide a valuable concept for both biology and soft robotics.


Subject(s)
Elephants , Nose , Skin Physiological Phenomena , Skin , Animals , Elephants/anatomy & histology , Elephants/physiology , Nose/anatomy & histology , Nose/physiology
5.
Curr Biol ; 32(10): 2334-2340.e3, 2022 05 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35476937

ABSTRACT

Because of scaling issues, passive muscle and joint forces become increasingly important as limb size decreases.1-3 In some small limbs, passive forces can drive swing in locomotion,4,5 and antagonist passive torques help control limb swing velocity.6 In stance, minimizing antagonist muscle and joint passive forces could save energy. These considerations predict that, for small limbs, evolution would result in the angle range over which passive forces are too small to cause limb movement (called "resting-state range" in prior insect work4 and "area of neutral equilibrium" in physics and engineering) correlating with the limb's typical working range, usually that in locomotion. We measured the most protracted and retracted thorax-femur (ThF) angles of the pro- (front), meso- (middle), and metathoracic (hind) leg during stick insect (Carausius morosus) walks. This ThF working range differed in the three leg types, being more posterior in more posterior legs. In other experiments, we manually protracted or retracted the denervated front, middle, and hind legs. Upon release, passive forces moved the leg in the opposite direction (retraction or protraction) until it reached the most protracted or most retracted edge of the ThF resting-state range. The ThF resting-state angle ranges correlated with the leg-type working range, being more posterior in more posterior legs. The most protracted ThF walking angles were more retracted than the post-protraction ThF angles, and the most retracted ThF walking angles were similar to the post-retraction ThF angles. These correlations of ThF working- and resting-state ranges could simplify motor control and save energy. These data also provide an example of evolution altering behavior by changing passive muscle and joint properties.7.


Subject(s)
Extremities , Walking , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Extremities/physiology , Insecta/physiology , Locomotion/physiology , Lower Extremity/physiology , Torque
6.
Biophys J ; 121(10): 1823-1855, 2022 05 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35450825

ABSTRACT

The active isometric force-length relation (FLR) of striated muscle sarcomeres is central to understanding and modeling muscle function. The mechanistic basis of the descending arm of the FLR is well explained by the decreasing thin:thick filament overlap that occurs at long sarcomere lengths. The mechanistic basis of the ascending arm of the FLR (the decrease in force that occurs at short sarcomere lengths), alternatively, has never been well explained. Because muscle is a constant-volume system, interfilament lattice distances must increase as sarcomere length shortens. This increase would decrease thin and thick-filament electrostatic interactions independently of thin:thick filament overlap. To examine this effect, we present here a fundamental, physics-based model of the sarcomere that includes filament molecular properties, calcium binding, sarcomere geometry including both thin:thick filament overlap and interfilament radial distance, and electrostatics. The model gives extremely good fits to existing FLR data from a large number of different muscles across their entire range of measured activity levels, with the optimized parameter values in all cases lying within anatomically and physically reasonable ranges. A local first-order sensitivity analysis (varying individual parameters while holding the values of all others constant) shows that model output is most sensitive to a subset of model parameters, most of which are related to sarcomere geometry, with model output being most sensitive to interfilament radial distance. This conclusion is supported by re-running the fits with only this parameter subset being allowed to vary, which increases fit errors only moderately. These results show that the model well reproduces existing experimental data, and indicate that changes in interfilament spacing play as central a role as changes in filament overlap in determining the FLR, particularly on its ascending arm.


Subject(s)
Cytoskeleton , Sarcomeres , Mechanical Phenomena , Muscle Contraction , Muscle, Skeletal , Sarcomeres/metabolism
7.
Curr Biol ; 31(21): R1430-R1432, 2021 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34752768

ABSTRACT

The elephant trunk is a muscular hydrostat with essentially infinite freedom of movement. Utilizing all this range would be extremely complex. A new analysis shows that elephants simplify such 'overchoice' by using twelve motor primitives that can generate most observed trunk movements.


Subject(s)
Movement , Nose
8.
J Neurosci ; 41(13): 2911-2929, 2021 03 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33531417

ABSTRACT

In the best studied cases (Aplysia feeding, crustacean stomatogastric system), peptidergic modulation is mediated by large numbers of peptides. Furthermore, in Aplysia, excitatory motor neurons release the peptides, obligatorily coupling target activation and modulator release. Vertebrate nervous systems typically contain about a hundred peptide modulators. These data have created a belief that modulation is, in general, complex. The stick insect leg is a well-studied locomotory model system, and the complete stick insect neuropeptide inventory was recently described. We used multiple techniques to comprehensively examine stick insect leg peptidergic modulation. Single-cell mass spectrometry (MS) and immunohistochemistry showed that myoinhibitory peptide (MIP) is the only neuronal (as opposed to hemolymph-borne) peptide modulator of all leg muscles. Leg muscle excitatory motor neurons contained no neuropeptides. Only the common inhibitor (CI) and dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neuron groups, each neuron of which innervates a group of functionally-related leg muscles, contained MIP. We described MIP transport to, and receptor presence in, one leg muscle, the extensor tibiae (ExtTi). MIP application reduced ExtTi slow fiber force and shortening by about half, increasing the muscle's ability to contract and relax rapidly. These data show neuromodulation does not need to be complex. Excitation and modulation do not need to be obligatorily coupled (Aplysia feeding). Modulation does not need to involve large numbers of peptides, with the attendant possibility of combinatorial explosion (stomatogastric system). Modulation can be simple, mediated by dedicated regulatory neurons, each innervating a single group of functionally-related targets, and all using the same neuropeptide.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems contain large numbers (around a hundred in human brain) of peptide neurotransmitters. In prior work, neuropeptide modulation has been complex, either obligatorily coupling postsynaptic excitation and modulation, or large numbers of peptides modulating individual neural networks. The complete stick insect neuropeptide inventory was recently described. We comprehensively describe here peptidergic modulation in the stick insect leg. Surprisingly, out of the large number of potential peptide transmitters, only myoinhibitory peptide (MIP) was present in neurons innervating leg muscles. Furthermore, the peptide was present only in dedicated regulatory neurons, not in leg excitatory motor neurons. Peptidergic modulation can thus be simple, neither obligatorily coupling target activation and modulation nor involving so many peptides that combinatorial explosion can occur.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Ganglia, Invertebrate/metabolism , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Muscle Contraction/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Drosophila Proteins/analysis , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Female , Ganglia, Invertebrate/chemistry , Insect Proteins/analysis , Insect Proteins/genetics , Insecta , Muscle, Skeletal/chemistry
9.
PDA J Pharm Sci Technol ; 75(2): 207-212, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33452049

ABSTRACT

The Process and Environmental Monitoring Methods Working Group, composed of members from industry and instrument manufacturers, met with the FDA Emerging Technology Team to discuss bio-fluorescent particle counting technology, a type of rapid microbiological method. This is a summary of the meeting including submitted questions and answers, and the Process and Environmental Monitoring Methods Working Group's understanding of the FDA Emerging Technology Team's points made.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Technology , Group Processes
10.
Curr Biol ; 30(21): R1301-R1304, 2020 11 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33142095

ABSTRACT

Octopus arm nervous systems have great arm-local information processing capabilities, raising the possibility each arm functions semi-independently. A recent two-choice behavioral study suggests, however, that the brain is required to learn, and choose in each trial, correct arm direction.


Subject(s)
Octopodiformes , Animals , Arm , Brain , Learning , Movement
11.
Curr Biol ; 29(11): R408-R410, 2019 06 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31163142

ABSTRACT

Whole-animal Hydra imaging shows that epitheliomuscular calcium influx dynamics and inter-cell progression speeds are very different for different behaviors. Hydra movements therefore likely arise from fast (ionotropic) and slow (metabotropic) neural mechanisms, and from interactions among the epitheliomuscular cells themselves.


Subject(s)
Hydra , Animals , Nervous System
12.
Curr Biol ; 29(1): 1-12.e7, 2019 01 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30581019

ABSTRACT

In large limbs, changing motor neuron activity typically controls within-movement velocity. For example, sequential agonist-antagonist-agonist motor neuron firing typically underlies the slowing often present at the end of human reaches. In physiological movements of large limbs, antagonistic muscle passive torque is generally negligible. In small limbs, alternatively, passive torques can determine limb rest position, generate restoring movements to it, and decrease agonist-generated movement amplitude and velocity maxima. These observations suggest that, in small limbs, passive forces might also control velocity changes within movements. We investigated this issue in stick insect middle leg femur-tibia (FT) joint. During swing, the FT joint extensor muscle actively shortens and the flexor muscle passively lengthens. As in human reaching, after its initial acceleration, FT joint velocity continuously decreases. We measured flexor passive forces during imposed stretches spanning the ranges of FT joint angles, angular velocities, and movement amplitudes present in leg swings. The viscoelastic "transient" passive force that occurs during and soon after stretch depended on all three variables and could be tens of times larger than the "steady-state" passive force commonly measured long after stretch end. We combined these data, the flexor and extensor moment arms, and an existing extensor model to simulate FT joint swing. To measure only passive (flexor) muscle-dependent effects, we used constant extensor activations in these simulations. In simulations using data from ten flexor muscles, flexor passive torque could always produce swings with, after swing initiation, continuously decreasing velocities. Antagonist muscle passive torques alone can thus control within-movement velocity.


Subject(s)
Insecta/physiology , Movement , Torque , Animals , Extremities/physiology , Motor Neurons/physiology , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
13.
J Neurophysiol ; 120(6): 3217-3233, 2018 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30354793

ABSTRACT

Choline chloride is often, and N-methyl-d-glucamine (NMDG) sometimes, used to replace sodium chloride in studies of sodium-activated potassium channels. Given the high concentrations used in sodium replacement protocols, it is essential to test that it is not the replacement substances themselves, as opposed to the lack of sodium, that cause any observed effects. We therefore compared, in lobster stomatogastric neurons and leech Retzius cells, the effects of applying salines in which choline chloride replaced sodium chloride, and in which choline hydroxide or sucrose was added to normal saline. We also tested, in stomatogastric neurons, the effect of adding NMDG to normal saline. These protocols allowed us to measure the direct effects (i.e., effects not due to changes in sodium concentration or saline osmolarity or ionic strength) of choline on stomatogastric and leech currents, and of NMDG on stomatogastric currents. Choline directly reduced transient and sustained depolarization-activated outward currents in both species, and NMDG directly reduced transient depolarization-activated outward currents in stomatogastric neurons. Experiments with lower choline concentrations showed that adding as little as 150 mM (stomatogastric) or 5 mM (leech) choline reduced at least some depolarization-activated outward currents. Reductions in outward current with choline chloride or NMDG replacement alone are thus not evidence of sodium-activated potassium currents. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We show that choline or N-methyl-d-glucamine (NMDG) directly (i.e., not due to changes in extracellular sodium) decrease outward currents. Prior work studying sodium-activated potassium channels in which sodium was replaced with choline or NMDG without an addition control may therefore be artifactual.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials , Meglumine/pharmacology , Neurons/metabolism , Potassium Channels/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Sodium/metabolism , Animals , Choline/pharmacology , Leeches , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/physiology , Palinuridae
14.
Curr Biol ; 25(20): R991-3, 2015 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26485374

ABSTRACT

Motor neural networks and muscles produce identifiably common outputs, such as a trot or gallop, despite varations in intrinsic properties across individuals. New work shows that sensory input can induce the requisite decrease in across-individual variability even as it increases within-individual variability.


Subject(s)
Aplysia/physiology , Feedback, Sensory , Motor Neurons/physiology , Animals
15.
Curr Biol ; 25(15): 2012-7, 2015 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26190069

ABSTRACT

In many animals, individual legs can either function independently, as in behaviors such as scratching or searching, or be used in coordinated patterns with other legs, as in walking or climbing. While the control of walking has been extensively investigated, the mechanisms mediating the behavioral choice to activate individual legs independently are poorly understood. We examined this issue in stick insects, in which each leg can independently produce a rhythmic searching motor pattern if it doesn't find a foothold [1-4]. We show here that one non-spiking interneuron, I4, controls searching behavior in individual legs. One I4 is present in each hemi-segment of the three thoracic ganglia [5, 6]. Search-inducing sensory input depolarizes I4. I4 activity was necessary and sufficient to initiate and maintain searching movements. When substrate contact was provided, I4 depolarization no longer induced searching. I4 therefore both integrates search-inducing sensory input and is gated out by other sensory input (substrate contact). Searching thus occurs only when it is behaviorally appropriate. I4 depolarization never elicited stepping. These data show that individual, locally activated neurons can mediate the behavioral choice to use individual legs independently. This mechanism may be particularly important in insects' front legs, which can function independently like vertebrate arms and hands [7]. Similar local command mechanisms that selectively activate the pattern generators controlling repeated functional units such as legs or body segments may be present in other systems.


Subject(s)
Extremities/physiology , Insecta/physiology , Animals , Appetitive Behavior , Interneurons/physiology , Motor Activity
16.
J Neurophysiol ; 114(2): 1255-71, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26063785

ABSTRACT

We recorded from lobster and leech neurons with two sharp electrodes filled with solutions often used with these preparations (lobster: 0.6 M K2SO4 or 2.5 M KAc; leech: 4 M KAc), with solutions approximately matching neuron cytoplasm ion concentrations, and with 6.5 M KAc (lobster, leech) and 0.6 M KAc (lobster). We measured membrane potential, input resistance, and transient and sustained depolarization-activated outward current amplitudes in leech and these neuron properties and hyperpolarization-activated current time constant in lobster, every 10 min for 60 min after electrode penetration. Neuron properties varied with electrode fill. For fills with molarities ≥2.5 M, neuron properties also varied strongly with time after electrode penetration. Depending on the property being examined, these variations could be large. In leech, cell size also increased with noncytoplasmic fills. The changes in neuron properties could be due to the ions being injected from the electrodes during current injection. We tested this possibility in lobster with the 2.5 M KAc electrode fill by making measurements only 10 and 60 min after penetration. Neuron properties still changed, although the changes were less extreme. Making measurements every 2 min showed that the time-dependent variations in neuron properties occurred in concert with each other. Neuron property changes with high molarity electrode-fill solutions were great enough to decrease neuron firing strongly. An experiment with (14)C-glucose electrode fill confirmed earlier work showing substantial leak from sharp electrodes. Sharp electrode work should thus be performed with cytoplasm-matched electrode fills.


Subject(s)
Electrodes , Histological Techniques , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Carbon Radioisotopes , Cell Size , Electric Impedance , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Histological Techniques/instrumentation , Ions/metabolism , Leeches , Membrane Potentials , Palinuridae , Patch-Clamp Techniques/instrumentation , Time Factors
17.
Curr Biol ; 25(9): R366-8, 2015 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25942549

ABSTRACT

Octopus arms have essentially infinite degrees of freedom. New research shows that, despite this potentially great complexity, to locomote octopuses simply elongate one or more arms, thus pushing the body in the opposite direction, and do so without activating the arms in an ordered pattern.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Extremities/physiology , Locomotion , Octopodiformes/physiology , Animals
18.
Biol Direct ; 10: 11, 2015 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25888113

ABSTRACT

Following the publication of this article [1] it was noticed that, due to an error on the part of the publisher, the 2nd round of comments submitted by Reviewer 1, Dr. López-García, were unintentionally omitted during the peer review process. As a consequence of this error, the authors were unable to reply to Dr. López-García's comments and subsequently revise their manuscript accordingly (where appropriate).In fairness to both the authors and reviewer, Dr. López-García's (Reviewer 1) 2nd round of comments are now included below and Scott L Hooper and Helaine J Burstein (author) were given the opportunity to reply. Any consequent amendments to the research article [1] are outlined in the author's replies.

19.
Biol Direct ; 9(1): 24, 2014 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25406691

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Internalization-based hypotheses of eukaryotic origin require close physical association of host and symbiont. Prior hypotheses of how these associations arose include chance, specific metabolic couplings between partners, and prey-predator/parasite interactions. Since these hypotheses were proposed, it has become apparent that mixed-species, close-association assemblages (biofilms) are widespread and predominant components of prokaryotic ecology. Which forces drove prokaryotes to evolve the ability to form these assemblages are uncertain. Bacteria and archaea have also been found to form membrane-lined interconnections (nanotubes) through which proteins and RNA pass. These observations, combined with the structure of the nuclear envelope and an energetic benefit of close association (see below), lead us to propose a novel hypothesis of the driving force underlying prokaryotic close association and the origin of eukaryotes. RESULTS: Respiratory proton transport does not alter external pH when external volume is effectively infinite. Close physical association decreases external volume. For small external volumes, proton transport decreases external pH, resulting in each transported proton increasing proton motor force to a greater extent. We calculate here that in biofilms this effect could substantially decrease how many protons need to be transported to achieve a given proton motor force. Based as it is solely on geometry, this energetic benefit would occur for all prokaryotes using proton-based respiration. CONCLUSIONS: This benefit may be a driving force in biofilm formation. Under this hypothesis a very wide range of prokaryotic species combinations could serve as eukaryotic progenitors. We use this observation and the discovery of prokaryotic nanotubes to propose that eukaryotes arose from physically distinct, functionally specialized (energy factory, protein factory, DNA repository/RNA factory), obligatorily symbiotic prokaryotes in which the protein factory and DNA repository/RNA factory cells were coupled by nanotubes and the protein factory ultimately internalized the other two. This hypothesis naturally explains many aspects of eukaryotic physiology, including the nuclear envelope being a folded single membrane repeatedly pierced by membrane-bound tubules (the nuclear pores), suggests that species analogous or homologous to eukaryotic progenitors are likely unculturable as monocultures, and makes a large number of testable predictions. REVIEWERS: This article was reviewed by Purificación López-García and Toni Gabaldón.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Eukaryotic Cells/physiology , Microbial Interactions , Models, Biological , Prokaryotic Cells/physiology , Biofilms , Genetic Variation
20.
PLoS One ; 8(6): e67930, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23840789

ABSTRACT

We report here the effects of temperature on the p1 neuromuscular system of the stomatogastric system of the lobster (Panulirus interruptus). Muscle force generation, in response to both the spontaneously rhythmic in vitro pyloric network neural activity and direct, controlled motor nerve stimulation, dramatically decreased as temperature increased, sufficiently that stomach movements would very unlikely be maintained at warm temperatures. However, animals fed in warm tanks showed statistically identical food digestion to those in cold tanks. Applying dopamine, a circulating hormone in crustacea, increased muscle force production at all temperatures and abolished neuromuscular system temperature dependence. Modulation may thus exist not only to increase the diversity of produced behaviors, but also to maintain individual behaviors when environmental conditions (such as temperature) vary.


Subject(s)
Dopamine/pharmacology , Muscles/drug effects , Muscles/innervation , Nerve Net/drug effects , Nervous System/drug effects , Pylorus/drug effects , Pylorus/innervation , Animals , Environment , Muscles/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Palinuridae/drug effects , Palinuridae/physiology , Pylorus/physiology , Temperature
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