Skip to main content
Log in

Patterns of synaptic input to identified flight motoneurons in the locust

  • Published:
Journal of Comparative Physiology A Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

  1. 1.

    We examined the pattern of synaptic input to identified flight motoneurons of the locust,Locusta migratoria. The preparation we used was one in which rhythmic motor activity resembling flight activity could be generated following removal of all sensory input from wing receptors. Intracellular recordings were made from the main neuropil processes of all the 17 different types of fast motoneurons in the meso- and metathoracic ganglia which innervate the main flight muscles. Motoneurons were identified anatomically by intracellular staining with Lucifer yellow following recording.

  2. 2.

    The pattern of synaptic input was similar in all elevator motoneurons (4 different types in each of the two ganglia). Three distinct components were observed in the profile of synaptic activity in these motoneurons. The first was a relatively slow depolarization beginning immediately after the end of a depolarization in depressor motoneurons, the second was a rapid depolarization which began at a variable interval after the beginning of the initial slow depolarization, and the third was a rapid repolarization occurring in-phase with depressor depolarizations. The similarity of synaptic input to elevator motoneurons prevented the use of physiological criteria for the identification of individual elevator motoneurons.

  3. 3.

    Unlike the elevators, the depressor motoneurons do not form a homogeneous group with regard to the pattern of centrally derived synaptic input. Different patterns of input were observed in different depressor motoneurons, including differences in input to homologous motoneurons in the meso- and metathoracic ganglia. The most obvious difference between the profiles of synaptic input to elevator and depressor motoneurons was that the depolarizations in the latter consisted of only a single component, the duration of which increased relatively slowly with increases in cycle time. Knowledge of the recording site within a ganglion and the pattern of synaptic input allowed depressor motoneurons to be identified individually.

  4. 4.

    Simultaneous recordings from an elevator and a depressor motoneuron within the same ganglion showed that the synaptic input to the two groups of motoneurons is not symmetrically timed. Each depolarization in depressor motoneurons began immediately following the end of a rapid depolarization in elevators, but the beginning of the rapid depolarizations in elevators was delayed following the end of each depressor depolarization by an amount depending on cycle time. A single depressor depolarization never occurred in the absence of a preceding rapid elevator depolarization. We conclude that the basic unit of activity in the central oscillator is an elevator followed by a depressor depolarization sequence.

  5. 5.

    Simultaneous recordings from homologous motoneurons in the meso- and metathoracic ganglia of deafferented preparations revealed that the depolarizations in elevator motoneurons in the two ganglia were in-phase. In depressors, however, the depolarizations in hindwing motoneurons led those in homologous forewing motoneurons by 5 to 15 ms indicating that central processes are partly, but not completely, responsible for establishing the relative timing of fore and hind wing movements in normal flight. This basic difference in the intersegmental driving of elevator and depressor motoneurons in deafferented preparations was confirmed in electromyographic recordings from homologous fore- and hindwing muscles.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Altman JS (1975) Changes in the flight motor pattern during the development of the Australian plague locust,Chortoicetes termini/era. J Comp Physiol 97:127–142

    Google Scholar 

  • Baker PS (1979) The role of forewing muscles in the control of direction in flying locusts. J Comp Physiol 131:59–66

    Google Scholar 

  • Burrows M (1973) The morphology of an elevator and a depressor motoneuron of the hindwing of a locust. J Comp Physiol 83:165–178

    Google Scholar 

  • Burrows M (1975) Monosynaptic connexions between wing stretch receptors and flight motoneurones of the locust. J Exp Biol 62:189–219

    Google Scholar 

  • Delcomyn F (1980) Neural basis of rhythmic behavior in animals. Science 210:492–498

    Google Scholar 

  • Grillner S, Zangger P (1979) On the central generation of locomotion in the low spinal cat. Exp Brain Res 34:241–261

    Google Scholar 

  • Heathcote RD (1980) Physiological development of a monosynaptic connection involved in an adult insect behavior. J Comp Neurol 191:155–166

    Google Scholar 

  • Kien J, Altman JS (1979) Connections of the locust wing tegulae with metathoracic flight motoneurones. J Comp Physiol 133:299–310

    Google Scholar 

  • Kristan WB, Burrows M, Elsner N, Grillner S, Huber F, Jankowska E, Pearson KG, Sears TA, Stent GS (1977) Neural control of movement: group report. In: Stent GS (ed) ‘Function and formation of neural systems’. Dahlem Konferenzen, Berlin, pp 329–354

    Google Scholar 

  • Möhl B, Bacon J (1983) The tritocerebral commissure giant (TCG) wind-sensitive interneurone in the locust. II. Directional sensitivity and role in flight stabilisation. J Comp Physiol 150:453–465

    Google Scholar 

  • Pearson KG, Illes JF (1970) Discharge patterns of coxal levator and depressor motoneurons in the cockroach,Periplaneta americana. J Exp Biol 52:139–165

    Google Scholar 

  • Pearson KG, Reye DN, Robertson RM (1983) Phase-dependent influences of wing stretch receptors on flight rhythm in the locust. J Neurophysiol 49:1168–1181

    Google Scholar 

  • Pfau HK (1978) Funktionsanatomische Aspekte des Insektenflugs. Zool Jb Anat 99:99–108

    Google Scholar 

  • Pfau HK, Nachtigall W (1981) Der Vorderflügel großer Heuschrecken als Luftkrafterzeuger. II. Zusammenspiel von Muskeln und Gelenkmechanik bei der Einstellung der Flügelgeometrie. J Comp Physiol 142:135–140

    Google Scholar 

  • Robertson RM, Pearson KG (1982) A preparation for the intracellular analysis of neuronal activity during flight in the locust. J Comp Physiol 146:311–320

    Google Scholar 

  • Robertson RM, Pearson KG (1983a) Interneurons in the flight system of the locust: distribution, connections and resetting properties. J Comp Neurol 215:33–50

    Google Scholar 

  • Robertson RM, Pearson KG (1983b) Circuitry underlying burst generation in the locust flight system. Neurosci Abstr 9:752

    Google Scholar 

  • Tyrer NM, Altman JS (1974) Motor and sensory flight neurones in a locust demonstrated using cobalt chloride. J Comp Neuroll 57:117–138

    Google Scholar 

  • Wendler G (1974) The influence of proprioceptive feedback on locust flight coordination. J Comp Physiol 88:173–200

    Google Scholar 

  • Wilson DM (1961) The central nervous control of flight in a locust. J Exp Biol 38:471–490

    Google Scholar 

  • Wilson DM (1962) Bifunctional muscles in the thorax of grasshoppers. J Exp Biol 39:669–677

    Google Scholar 

  • Wilson DM, Gettrup E (1963) A stretch reflex controlling wingbeat frequency in grasshoppers. J Exp Biol 40:171–185

    Google Scholar 

  • Wilson DM, Weis-Fogh T (1962) Patterned activity in co-ordinated motor units, studied in flying locusts. J Exp Biol 39:643–667

    Google Scholar 

  • Zarnack W, Möhl B (1977) Activity of the direct downstroke flight muscles inLocusta migratoria (L.) during steering behavior in flight. J Comp Physiol 118:215–233

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Hedwig, B., Pearson, K.G. Patterns of synaptic input to identified flight motoneurons in the locust. J. Comp. Physiol. 154, 745–760 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01350228

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01350228

Keywords

Navigation