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Pacemaker potentials for the periodic burst discharge in the heart ganglion of a stomatopod, Squilla oratoria.

TLDR
From somata of the pacemaker neurons in the Squilla heart ganglion, pacemaker potentials for the spontaneous periodic burst discharge are recorded with intracellular electrodes, showing that it is an electrically excitable response.
Abstract
From somata of the pacemaker neurons in the Squilla heart ganglion, pacemaker potentials for the spontaneous periodic burst discharge are recorded with intracellular electrodes. The electrical activity is composed of slow potentials and superimposed spikes, and is divided into four types, which are: (a) "mammalian heart" type, (b) "slow generator" type, (c) "slow grower" type, and (d) "slow deficient" type. Since axons which are far from the somata do not produce slow potentials, the soma and dendrites must be where the slow potentials are generated. Hyperpolarization impedes generation of the slow potential, showing that it is an electrically excitable response. Membrane impedance increases on depolarization. Brief hyperpolarizing current can abolish the plateau but brief tetanic inhibitory fiber stimulation is more effective for the abolition. A single stimulus to the axon evokes the slow potential when the stimulus is applied some time after a previous burst. Repetitive stimuli to the axon are more effective in eliciting the slow potential, but the depolarization is not maintained on continuous stimulation. Synchronization of the slow potential among neurons is achieved by: (a) the electrotonic connections, with periodic change in resistance of the soma membrane, (b) active spread of the slow potential, and (c) synchronization through spikes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Impulse initiation and propagation in the heart ganglion cell of a stomatopod, Squilla oratoria.

TL;DR: A soma-dendritic membrane of this ganglion cell has a higher threshold than that of an axom and it is electrically excitable, which sets up a graded active change of membrane potential of a soma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiterminal proprioceptors in Squilla mantis (Stomatopoda, Crustacea).

TL;DR: A series of morphologically simple multiterminal proprioceptors is described in the throacopods of the hoplocardian crustacean, Squilla mantis, which is a primitive offshoot of the main malacostracan evolutionary line.

of the Lobster, Homarus americanus

Earl Mayeri
TL;DR: Properties of the neural mechanism responsible for generating the periodic burst of spike potentials in the nine ganglion neurons were investi- gated by applying brief, single shocks to the four small cells with extracellular electrodes placed near the trigger zones of the small cells.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of current flow on the membrane potential of cardiac muscle.

TL;DR: An account of experiments designed to investigate the cardiac action potential by applying suitable pulses of current at various stages in the cardiac cycle is contained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of single motoneurons to direct stimulation in toad's spinal cord.

TL;DR: The results reported here were obtained with a method of direct stimulation of single spinal motoneurons of Japanese toads using the same microelectrode with certain compensation circuits for both stimulation and recording.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vagal and sympathetic effects on the pacemaker fibers in the sinus venosus of the heart

TL;DR: It is proposed that the fibers showing the largest fall in membrane potential during diastole are the pacemaker fibers of the heart, and that the rest of the preparation is excited by conduction.
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