Abstract
Tactile or electrical stimulation of the skin can be used to produce dishabituation, sensitization, and classical conditioning of the gill- and siphon-withdrawal reflex in Aplysia. These behavioral effects are thought to involve presynaptic facilitation at the synapses from siphon sensory neurons to gill and siphon motor neurons. Facilitation of PSPs onto the motor neurons can also be produced by intracellular stimulation of single identified neurons in the abdominal ganglion, including L29 and L28. In this paper, we further characterize L29 and L28. First, we show that they are excited by cutaneous stimuli similar to those used to produce dishabituation, sensitization, and classical conditioning and may therefore participate in mediating those behavioral effects. The results are also consistent with a possible role of L29 and L28 in higher-order features of conditioning. Second, we show that 5-HT does not mimic some of the PSPs of L29, in agreement with previous evidence that L29 is not serotonergic. Third, we present 2 types of evidence that L29 acts directly to produce facilitation of the sensory cells: (1) L29 comes into close contact with sensory cells in fluorescent double-labeling experiments, and (2) L29 produces facilitation of sensory cells in dissociated cell culture. Together with the results of the preceding paper (Mackey et al., 1989), these results indicate that facilitation of sensory cell synapses contributing to behavioral enhancement of the reflex can be produced by identified neurons that use 2 different transmitters: 5-HT (the transmitter of CB1) and the unknown transmitter of L29.