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Sensorimotor integration is a pivotal feature of the nervous system for ensuring a coordinated motor response to external stimuli. In essence, such neural circuits can optimize behavioral performance based on the saliency of environmental cues. In zebrafish, habituation of the acoustic startle response (ASR) is a simple behavior integrated into the startle command neurons, called the Mauthner cells. Whereas the essential neuronal components that regulate the startle response have been identified, the principles of how this regulation is integrated at the subcellular regions of the Mauthner cell, which in turn modulate the performance of the behavior, is still not well understood. Here, we reveal mechanistically distinct dynamics of excitatory inputs converging onto the lateral dendrite (LD) and axon initial segment (AIS) of the Mauthner cell by imaging glutamate release using iGluSnFR, an ultrafast glutamate sensing fluorescent reporter. We find that modulation of glutamate release is dependent on NMDA receptor activity exclusively at the AIS, which is responsible for setting the sensitivity of the startle reflex and inducing a depression of synaptic activity during habituation. In contrast, glutamate-release at the LD is not regulated by NMDA receptors and serves as a baseline component of Mauthner cell activation. Finally, using calcium imaging at the feed-forward interneuron population component of the startle circuit, we reveal that these cells indeed play pivotal roles in both setting the startle threshold and habituation by modulating the AIS of the Mauthner cell. These results indicate that a command neuron may have several functionally distinct regions to regulate complex aspects of behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2021.648487 | DOI Listing |
eNeuro
May 2025
Champalimaud Research, Champalimaud Foundation, Lisbon 1400-038, Portugal
From lamprey to monkeys, the organization of the descending control of locomotion is conserved across vertebrates. Reticulospinal neurons (RSNs) form a bottleneck for descending commands, receiving innervation from diencephalic and mesencephalic locomotor centers and providing locomotor drive to spinal motor circuits. Given their optical accessibility in early development, larval zebrafish offer a unique opportunity to study reticulospinal circuitry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Health Perspect
June 2025
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Ritsumeikan University, Shiga, Japan.
Background: Developing human fetuses may be exposed to the chemical compound bisphenol A (BPA), and retinoic acid (RA) has been detected at low levels in water sources. RA signaling regulates key developmental genes and is essential for organ development, including the brain. We previously reported that RA/BPA coexposure of mouse embryonic stem cells potentiates RA signaling, which warrants further investigation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Model Mech
April 2025
Department of Cellular Neurobiology, Georg-August-University Göttingen, 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
TOMM70 is a receptor at the contact site between mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum, and TOMM70 has been identified as a risk gene for hereditary spastic paraplegia. Furthermore, de novo missense variants of TOMM70 have been identified to cause neurological impairments in two unrelated patients. Here, we show that mutant zebrafish ruehreip25ca also harbour a missense mutation in tomm70, affecting the same conserved isoleucine residue as in one of the human patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Morphol
April 2025
Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA.
Mauthner cells are found in most fish and amphibians. The prominence of their large fiber is commonly used as one criterion to identify the presence of these cells in fish and the largest of these fibers have been reported in lungfish. While some authors believe that Mauthner fibers in lungfish contain a single axon, others report that many processes join the Mauthner axon (M-axon) inside a common myelin sheath to form a "multi-axial fiber.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Biol
June 2025
School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA. Electronic address:
Transcriptional regulation of gene expression is an indispensable process in multicellular development, yet we still do not fully understand how the complex networks of transcription factors operating in neuronal precursors coordinately control the expression of effector genes that shape morphogenesis and terminal differentiation. Here we break down in greater detail a provisional regulatory circuit downstream of the transcription factor Pax3/7 operating in the descending decussating neurons (ddNs) of the tunicate Ciona robusta. The ddNs are a pair of hindbrain neurons proposed to be homologous to the Mauthner cells of anamniotes, and Pax3/7 is sufficient and necessary for their specification.
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