FMFRamide
Functional specifity of FMRFamides
Numerous studies of plasticity in
the feeding behavior of Aplysia have shown that substantial plasticity is due to
peripheral neuromodulation of the feeding musculature. Extensive previous work
focusing on the accessory radula closer (ARC) muscle has led to the realization
that a major function of the modulation in that muscle may be to ensure
efficient coordination between its contractions and those of its antagonist
muscles. For a more complete understanding, therefore, these
muscles must also be studied. The radula opener muscles I7-I10 has now been studied. Using single isolated muscle fibers under voltage clamp, ion
currents gated by voltage and by the physiological contraction-inducing
neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) have been studied and the effects of the physiological
modulators serotonin, myomodulins A and B, and FMRFamide. The results explain
significant aspects of the electrophysiological behavior of the whole opener
muscles, as well as why the opener and ARC muscles behave similarly in many ways
yet differently in some key respects. Opener muscles express four types of K
currents: inward rectifier; A-type [IK(A)]; delayed rectifier [IK(V)], and
Ca2+-activated [IK(Ca)]. They also express an L-type Ca current [ICa] and a
leakage current. ACh activates a positive-reversing cationic current [IACh(cat)]
and a negative-reversing Cl current [IACh(Cl)]. The opener muscles differ from
the ARC in that, in the openers, activation of IK(A) occurs approximately 9 mV
more positive and there is much less IACh(Cl). In both muscles, IACh(cat) most
likely serves to depolarize the muscle until ICa activates to supply Ca2+ for
contraction, but further depolarization and spiking is opposed by coactivation
of IK(A), IK(V), IK(Ca), and IACh(Cl). Thus the differences in IK(A) and
IACh(Cl) may well be key factors that prevent spikes in the ARC but often allow
them in the opener muscles. As in the ARC, the modulators enhance ICa and so
potentiate contractions. They also activate a modulator-specific K current,
which causes hyperpolarization and depression of contractions. Finally, in the
opener muscles but not in the ARC, the modulators activate a depolarizing
cationic current that may help phase-advance the contractions. Each modulator
exerts these effects to different degrees and thus has a distinct effect on
voltage and contraction size and shape. The overall effect will depend on
the specific combinations of modulators released in different behaviors. By
understanding the modulation in the opener muscles, as well as in the ARC, how the behavior of the two muscles is
coordinated under a variety of circumstances can now be understood (Scott, 1997).
The molluscan neuropeptide FMRFamide has a number of inhibitory actions on the
sensory neurons and motoneurons mediating the defensive gill and siphon
withdrawal reflex pathway of Aplysia californica. Exogenous application of
FMRFamide has a biphasic, dual-polarity effect on the majority of LFS siphon
motoneurons, causing a transient depolarization followed by a prolonged
hyperpolarization. FMRFamide induces this response in LFS neurons by causing an
increase in multiple ionic currents, including a transient Na+ current, a slow
prolonged Na+ current, a 4-aminopyridine (4-AP)-sensitive K+ current and a
4-AP-insensitive K+ current. A subset of LFS neurons exhibits
an exclusively excitatory, biphasic response to FMRFamide, consisting of a
transient depolarization followed by a prolonged depolarization of reduced
magnitude. Over a period of 29 months, an increase in
the incidence of the exclusively excitatory response was consistently observed during the summer months (June to September). From October to May, an exclusively excitatory
response to FMRFamide in 19% of LFS neurons was observed; yet, in the summer months, 51% of LFS neurons exhibit this response pattern. The ionic basis of the
exclusively excitatory response to FMRFamide was compared with the ionic mechanisms mediating the more frequently observed excitatory/inhibitory response. The exclusively excitatory response involves three of the same ionic components as the more typical excitatory/inhibitory response, including the activation of a transient
Na+ current, a slow prolonged Na+ current and a 4-AP-insensitive K+ current. The
principal difference between the two response types is that FMRFamide fails to
activate a 4-AP-sensitive K+ current in those LFS neurons that exhibit an
exclusively excitatory response to the peptide. In addition, LFS neurons with an
exclusively excitatory response tend to show a coordinated increase in the
magnitude of the inward current component of the FMRFamide response. Together,
these changes during the summer months may enable this modulatory peptide to
bring LFS neurons to suprathreshold levels of activity for eliciting a siphon
withdrawal and should substantially alter the neuromodulatory effects of the
peptide (Belkin. 1998).
This study examined differential modulation of motor neurons that innervate the same muscle but use
different excitatory transmitters in Aplysia. The medial portion of intrinsic buccal muscle 3 (I3m) is innervated by two
excitatory motor neurons, B3 and B9. B3 uses glutamate as its fast transmitter
and expresses the neuropeptide FMRFamide, whereas B9 uses acetylcholine as its
fast transmitter and expresses the neuropeptide SCP. This preparation was used
to study peptidergic modulation of muscles innervated by neurons that use
different fast excitatory transmitters. The effects of the
application of the neuropeptides expressed in these neurons on excitatory
junction potentials (EJPs) and contractions were determined. FMRFamide increases the amplitude of EJPs and contractions evoked by B3 while decreasing those evoked by B9. This is the first observation in buccal muscle of a substance that modulates two
excitatory neurons innervating the same muscle in opposite directions. SCP
increases EJPs contraction amplitude, and the rate of muscle relaxation for both
motor neurons. SCP potently increased cAMP levels in I3m as
it does in other buccal muscles. Stimulation of B9 also causes increases cAMP
levels in I3m, providing independent evidence for SCP release. Stimulation of B9 increases both the contraction amplitude and relaxation rate
of B3-evoked I3m contractions in a manner similar to that observed using
exogenous SCP. By inhibiting B9's cholinergic transmission with an antagonist, the
modulatory effects of B9 could be observed in the absence of fast
excitatory effects. The magnitude of the modulation is dependent
on the firing frequency and occurs at frequencies and patterns of firing
recorded for B9 during ingestive-like motor programs (Keating, 1999).
Fibers immunoreactive (IR) to serotonin (5-HT), the myomodulins
(MMs), and FMRFamide were observed on the I7-I10 complex in the marine mollusk Aplysia californica. The I7-I10 muscle complex, which produces radula opening, is
innervated primarily by one motor neuron, B48. B48 is MM-IR and synthesizes
authentic MM(A). When B48 is stimulated in a physiological manner, cAMP levels
are increased in opener muscles. cAMP increases also are seen when the MMs are
applied to opener muscles but are not seen with application of the B48 primary
neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh). Possible physiological sources of 5-HT and
FMRFamide are discussed. When modulators are applied to resting opener muscles,
changes in membrane potential are observed. Specifically, 5-HT, MM(B), and low
concentrations of MM(A) all depolarize muscle fibers. This depolarization is
generally not sufficient to elicit myogenic activity in the absence of neural
activity under 'rest' conditions. However, if opener muscles are stretched
beyond rest length, stretch- and modulator-induced depolarizations can summate
and elicit contractions. This only occurs, however, if 'depolarizing' modulators
are applied alone. Thus other modulators [i.e., FMRFamide and high
concentrations of MM(A)] hyperpolarize opener muscle fibers and can prevent
depolarizing modulators from eliciting myogenic activity. All modulators tested
affected parameters of motor neuron-elicited contractions of opener muscles.
MM(B) and 5-HT increase contraction size over the range of concentrations
tested, whereas MM(A) potentiates contractions when it is applied at lower
concentrations but decreases contraction size at higher concentrations.
FMRFamide decreases contraction size at all concentrations and does not affect
relaxation rate. Additionally, the MMs and 5-HT increase muscle relaxation
rate, decrease contraction latency, and decrease the rate at which tension is
developed during motor neuron-elicited muscle contractions. Thus these
modulators dramatically affect the ability of opener muscles to follow activity
in the opener motor neuron B48. The possible physiological significance of these
findings is discussed (Evans, 1999).
FMRFamide, synaptic modification and learning
The gill- and siphon-withdrawal reflex of Aplysia undergoes transient inhibition
following noxious stimuli such as tail shock. This behavioral inhibition appears to be
due in part to transient presynaptic inhibition of the siphon sensory cells, which can be
mimicked by application of the peptide FMRFamide. Although FMRFamide is
widespread in the Aplysia nervous system, an FMRFamide-containing inhibitory
neuron has not previously been identified. A search was carried out for such a neuron by
combining FMRFamide immunofluorescence with fluorescent dye backfilling from the
abdominal ganglion, the location of the siphon sensory cells. These methods localize a
neuron in the left pleural ganglion, termed LPL16. LPL16 is
FMRFamide immunoreactive; it is excited by tail shock; stimulation of LPL16
produces inhibition of siphon sensory cell-to-motor cell postsynaptic potentials and
narrowing of action potentials in the sensory cells in tetraethylammonium solution.
These results indicate that LPL16 participates in the inhibitory effects of tail shock,
and support the idea that FMRFamide plays a physiological role in the inhibition (Small, 1992).
At least two processes contribute to the modulation by 5-HT of the connections
between sensory neurons and motor neurons in Aplysia. The first involves broadening
of the presynaptic spike through modulation of 5-HT-sensitive K+ channels that leads
to elevated levels of intracellular Ca2+ and increased release of transmitter. A second
process (or set of processes) apparently accounts for the amount of facilitation not
produced by presynaptic spike broadening. This spike duration-independent (SDI)
process is particularly prominent in depressed synapses. A protocol was used in which
spikes are prebroadened into a range of durations in which further spike broadening
by itself has little or no effect on facilitation of the EPSP. 5-HT produces pronounced
facilitation in depressed synapses under these conditions. Another modulatory agent,
small cardioactive peptide (SCPb), also broadens spikes in sensory neurons but does
not produce facilitation comparable to that produced by 5-HT. These results indicate
that 5-HT activates the SDI process whereas SCPb fails to do so. A 5 min
preexposure to the modulatory peptide FMRFamide inhibits 5-HT-induced activation
of the SDI process, whereas a 1 min preexposure does not. Another process that
may modulate synaptic efficacy in sensorimotor synapses involves a change in the
properties of the motor (follower) neuron, such as input resistance. FMRFamide
decreases the input resistance of postsynaptic neurons. This action could contribute to
the effects of FMRFamide when administered alone, but it does not appear to be
responsible for the inhibitory action of FMRFamide on 5-HT-induced facilitation.
Neither 5-HT nor SCPb have a clear effect on input resistance. The actions of these
three agents, therefore, seem to be differentially distributed among various pre- and
postsynaptic processes involved in the modulation of synaptic transmission (Pieroni, 1992).
Cell adhesion molecules play important roles in axon guidance and synapse formation.
Recent studies suggest that the expression of some of these molecules can be
regulated either by electrical activity or by specific neurotransmitters. The expression
of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM)-like molecules in Aplysia (see Drosophila Fasciclin II), designated
apCAM, is downregulated from the surface of sensory neurons by 5-HT, a transmitter
known to evoke long-term changes in the structure and function of these neurons. Whether the distribution of apCAM on the surface of other neurons can be
regulated by treatments with other neurotransmitters known to evoke long-term
functional and structural changes in Aplysia neurons was tested, as well as the
consequences of treatments with the neurotransmitters on the pattern of growth
cone-neurite interactions. Applications of the neuropeptide
Phe-Met-Arg-Phe-amide (FMRFamide) that evoke long-term synaptic depression also
reduce apCAM expression on the surface of motor cell L7 via a mechanism that
appears to be similar to the mechanism mediating the 5-HT-induced change in the
sensory cells. Specific treatments that affect apCAM distribution on the surface of
their respective cells (5-HT on sensory cells and FMRFamide on motor cell L7) mimic
treatment with monoclonal antibodies against apCAM by evoking a significant
reduction in the fasciculation of growth cones with other neurites extending from
homologous cells (Peter, 1994).
FMRFamide evokes long-term inhibition of the sensorimotor connection of Aplysia, including structural alterations in the presynaptic sensory cell. FMRFamide also
evokes a down-regulation of the adhesion molecule apCAM from the surface of the
postsynaptic motor cell L7. The second messenger pathways mediating
the long-term actions of FMRFamide on both the pre- and postsynaptic cells were examined to determine whether the activation of each pathway is required for the expression of
long-term functional and structural plasticity. Inhibition of the lipoxygenase pathway of
arachidonic acid metabolism, but not the cyclooxygenase pathway, blocks the
long-term changes in the presynaptic sensory cell evoked by FMRFamide. The
down-regulation of apCAM in L7 appears to be mediated by cAMP-dependent
activation of protein kinase A. Blocking the cAMP-dependent changes also blocks
FMRFamide-induced long-term functional and structural changes. These results
suggest that the expression of long-term heterosynaptic inhibition in Aplysia may
require concomitant presynaptic and postsynaptic changes, each transduced by
specific second messenger systems (Wu, 1994).
Both 5-HT and FMRFamide evoke long-lasting changes in the efficacy of sensorimotor
(SN-L7) synapses of Aplysia, structural alterations of the presynaptic sensory cell,
and cell-specific downregulation in the distribution of the adhesion molecule apCAM.
The cell-specific changes in apCAM, related to vertebrate NCAM and Drosophila Fas II, contribute to the
formation of new presynaptic varicosities by 5-HT and the elimination of existing
presynaptic varicosities by FMRFamide. The formation of new sensory
varicosities is directed by the presence of preexisting zones on the motor axon that are
enriched for apCAM. Moreover, there was a further enrichment of apCAM levels at
existing sensory varicosities contacting the motor axon beginning at 1 hr and lasting 24
hr after treatment with 5-HT. As was found for synapse formation during the early
stages of cell-cell interaction, incubation with anti-apCAM mAb blocks the
5-HT-induced long-term changes in synaptic efficacy and the accompanying changes
in sensory neuron structure. Long-term synaptic depression with FMRFamide is
accompanied by an overall decline of apCAM levels. Treatment with FMRFamide
evokes an even greater decline in apCAM levels at sites of sensory varicosities that
precede the structural changes and persist especially at sites where sensory
varicosities are eliminated. These results suggest that neurotransmitters evoke both
cell- and site-specific changes in the levels of adhesion molecules that can influence
either the formation or the elimination of presynaptic varicosities that accompany
long-term heterosynaptic modulation of a behaviorally relevant synaptic connection (Zhu, 1995).
Synaptic transmission and excitability in Aplysia sensory neurons (SNs) are
bidirectionally modulated by 5-HT and FMRFamide. To explore the regional
distribution of different functional receptors that modulate SN properties, changes in synaptic efficacy and excitability were examined upon brief focal
applications of the neuromodulators to different regions of SNs that have
established connections with motor cell L7 in culture. Short-term changes in
synaptic efficacy are evoked only when 5-HT or FMRFamide is applied to regions
with SN varicosities along the surface of L7 axons. Applications to adjacent SN
neurites with few varicosities in contact with L7 axons fail to evoke a
significant change in synaptic efficacy. The distribution of functional
receptors mediating changes in excitability differ for 5-HT and FMRFamide.
Whereas excitability increases are evoked only when 5-HT is applied to SN cell
bodies, excitability decreases in SNs are evoked only when FMRFamide is
applied to regions along the L7 axon with SN varicosities. Without the target
cell, cell bodies of SNs express both 5-HT and FMRFamide receptors that
modulate excitability. These results indicate that functional G-protein-coupled
receptors for two neuromodulators are distributed differentially along the
surface of a presynaptic neuron that forms chemical connections in vitro. This
differential distribution of receptors on the presynaptic neuron is regulated by
a target and does not require the physical presence of neurons that release the
neuromodulators (Sun, 1996).
The synapses between the sensory neuron (SN) and motor neuron of Aplysia undergo
long-term functional and structural modulation with appropriate behavioral
training or with applications of specific neuromodulators. Expression of
molecules within the presynaptic terminals may be regulated in parallel with the
changes evoked by the neuromodulators. Immunocytochemical
methods were used to examine whether the level of sensorin, the SN-specific neuropeptide, is
modulated in SN varicosities by the location of interaction with the target
motor cell L7 and by applications of either 5-HT, which evokes long-term
facilitation or FMRFamide, which evokes long-term depression of Aplysia
sensorimotor connections in vitro. A significantly higher proportion of SN
varicosities are sensorin positive when they are in contact with the proximal
axons of L7, as compared to varicosities of the same SNs in contact with distal L7
neurites. Both 5-HT and FMRFamide evoke changes in the efficacy and structure
of sensorimotor connections that are accompanied by changes in the frequency of
sensorin-positive varicosities contacting the axons of L7. More preexisting SN
varicosities are stained after 5-HT, and fewer preexisting SN varicosities are
stained after FMRFamide. These results suggest that the postsynaptic target and
the neuromodulators not only regulate overall structure but also regulate the
level of SN neuropeptide at synaptic sites (Santarelli, 1996).
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FMRFamide:
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