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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 153 (1983), S. 495-508 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Compensatory eye and head movements, and responses of central vestibular neurons of frogs and turtles were investigated. 2. Eye movements (head restrained) evoked by optokinetic stimulation reach low peak slow phase velocities in both species: 1.5 °/s in frog and ca. 4 °/s in turtle. The optimal working range of the ocular optokinetic system is restricted to stimulus velocities 〈1 °/s. Optokinetic-afternystagmus (OKAN) of the eyes is absent in frog (n = 14) and can be present in turtle (one out of five animals). 3. Head movements evoked by optokinetic stimuli reach higher velocities in both species than the eyes and gaze is stabilized by head movements up to 80% of the stimulus velocity within the different working ranges (up to ca. 4 °/s in frog and up to ca. 25 °/s in turtle). Head OKAN is absent in frog (n = 23) and present in turtle (n = 10). OKAN head velocity in turtle decays linearly with apparent time constants between 6 and 12 s (for 20 °/s stimulus velocity). 4. Vestibular per/postrotatory nystagmus (PRN) of the head is short in frog (2–4 s in duration) compared to that in the turtle, where PRN head velocity decays linearly with apparent time constants between 7 and 11s (for 20 °/s velocity steps). Parametric similarities of OKAN and PRN and almost perfect cancellation of head PRN by head OKAN for velocity steps below 30 °/s in the turtle suggest a common neuronal storage for optokinetically and vestibularly evoked head velocity signals. 5. Eye-head coordination is very similar in both species. Fast phases resetting the position of eyes and head are coupled. The major contribution of the ocular motor system is restricted to brief transient periods (at the onset of compensatory movements; after each fast phase) during which the neck motor system more slowly accelerates the head. 6. Responses of central vestibular neurons to velocity steps have short time constants (1–4 s) in alert frogs and optokinetic stimuli modulate the activity of these neurons only exceptionally (2 out of 82). In the turtle, apparent time constants are longer (between 6 and 14 s, mean ca. 9 s) and resting activity of 10 out of 11 neurons was optokinetically modulated. 7. Like the behavioral data, vestibular unit data contain evidence for a functioning velocity storage network in turtles, but not in frogs. These differences in the properties of gaze stabilizing reflexes are discussed in relation with the differing demands that result from differences in the locomotory repertoires of the two species.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The concentrations of inorganic cations (K+, Na+, and Ca2+) bathing the isolated frog labyrinth were varied in order to assess their role in influencing and mediating synaptic transmission at the hair cell-afferent fiber synapse. Experiments employed intracellular recordings of synaptic activity from VIIIth nerve afferents. Recordings were digitized continuously at 50 kHz, and excitatory postsynaptic potentials were detected and parameters quantified by computer algorithms. Particular attention was focused on cationic effects upon excitatory postsynaptic potential frequency of occurrence and excitatory postsynaptic potential amplitude, in order to discriminate between pre- and postsynaptic actions. Because the small size of afferents preclude long term stable recordings, alterations in cationic concentrations were applied transiently and their peak effects on synaptic activity were assessed. Increases in extracellular K+ concentration of a few millimolar produced a large increase in the frequency of occurrence of excitatory postsynaptic potentials with little change in amplitude, indicating that release of transmitter from the hair cell is tightly coupled to its membrane potential. Increasing extracellular Na+ concentration resulted in an increase in excitatory postsynaptic potential amplitude with no significant change in excitatory postsynaptic potential frequency of occurrence, suggesting that the transmitter-gated subsynaptic channel conducts Na+ ions. Decreases in extracellular Ca2+ concentration had little effect upon excitatory postsynaptic potential frequency, but increased excitatory postsynaptic potential frequency and amplitude. These findings suggest that at higher concentrations Ca2+ act presynaptically to prevent transmitter release and postsynaptically to prevent Na+ influx during the generation of the excitatory postsynaptic potential. The influences of these ions on synaptic activity at this synapse are remarkably similar to those reported at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction. The major differences between these two synapses are the neurotransmitters and the higher resting release rate and higher sensitivity of release to increased K+ concentrations of the hair cells over that of motor nerve terminals. These differences reflect the functional roles of the two synapses: the motor nerve terminal response in an all-or-nothing signal consequent from action potential invasion, while the hair cell releases transmitter in a graded fashion, proportionate to the extent of stereocilial deflection. Despite these differences between the two junctions, the similar actions of these elemental cations upon synaptic function at each implies that these ions may participate similarly in the operations of other synapses, independent of the neurotransmitter type.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS).
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Neuroscience (ISSN 0306-4522); Volume 68; 4; 1147-65
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    Unknown
    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Efferent stimulation and nicotinic agonists can either decrease or increase the frequency of occurrence of EPSPs recorded from VIIIth nerve afferents in the frog. It has been hypothesized that the distribution of hair cell resting membrane potentials overlaps the equilibrium potential dictated by the nicotinic-gated channels on the hair cells. Nicotinic mediated increases in EPSP frequency would then be due to depolarization of hair cells that were more hyperpolarized at rest, while decreases in EPSP frequency would be due to hyperpolarization of hair cells more depolarized at rest. In order to test this hypothesis, while recording from afferents which showed an increase in EPSP frequency due to bath application of the nicotinic agonist DMPP (1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperizinium iodide), hair cells were depolarized with 10 mM K+ in the bath, and then the effects of DMPP on EPSP frequency were assessed. In this situation, DMPP still increased EPSP frequency, suggesting that the equilibrium potential for the nicotinic-gated channel was much more positive than the resting potentials of the hair cells. An alternative hypothesis then seems likely, that the nicotinic receptors on hair cells are able to activate different iontophores that result in either hair cell depolarization or hyperpolarization, dependent upon which iontophore predominates in the hair cells innervating a particular afferent.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Brain research (ISSN 0006-8993); Volume 642; 1-2; 344-7
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  • 4
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    Unknown
    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (ISSN 0077-8923); Volume 656; 580-93
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Although hair cells in the cochlea and in the vestibular endorgans of anamniotes are thought to release glutamate or a similar compound as their transmitter, there is little evidence in amniotes (which, unlike anamniotes, possess both type I and II hair cells) as to the nature of the hair cell transmitters in the vestibular labyrinth. We have recorded extracellularly from single semicircular canal afferents in the turtle labyrinth maintained in vitro and have bath-applied a number of transmitter agonists and antagonists to relate the effects of these substances to the actions of the endogenous transmitter substances. Both glutamate and aspartate strongly excite the afferents while GABA and carbachol have negligible or weak effects. In contrast to its lack of effect on afferent activity in some anamniotes, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) was also found to excite these afferents. Kynurenic acid reversibly reduced the resting firing rates of the afferents and the increases in firing due to the application of glutamate and aspartate. These findings provide preliminary support for the hypothesis that glutamate (or a related compound) is also a vestibular hair cell transmitter in amniotes.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Brain research (ISSN 0006-8993); 670; 2; 321-5
    Format: text
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