Abstract
A pair of large serotonergic neurons, the Retzius (Rz) cells, is found in each segment of the leech nervous system. Most Rz cells innervate the body wall of their own segment as well as adjacent anterior and posterior segments. Rz cells in segments 5 and 6 [Rz (5,6)] instead innervate the reproductive tissue found only in those segments. Rz cells from adjacent segments [Rz (4,7)] provide the serotonergic innervation of the body wall of segments 5 and 6. During embryogenesis, the body wall and the reproductive tissue are apparently available to both Rz (5,6) and Rz (4,7), yet these neurons choose different targets. We asked how Rz (5,6) and Rz (4,7) choose their respective peripheral targets in the reproductive segments by ablating either the reproductive tissue or specific Rz cells. Ablation of the reproductive tissue caused Rz (5,6) to innervate body wall, although not as proficiently as did standard Rz cells, suggesting a preference of Rz (5,6) for reproductive tissue. Ablation of those Rz cells that would normally innervate the body wall of segments 5 and 6 did not cause Rz (5,6) to innervate body wall, ruling out competition for this target. When Rz (5,6) were ablated, Rz (4,7) innervated the body wall of segments 5 and 6 normally and did not innervate reproductive tissue. Thus, competition did not act in the choice of target by Rz (4,7) either. These results suggest that during normal development, Rz (5,6) and Rz (4,7) choose their targets independently of one another rather than competing for the available targets and that these cells have segment-specific target preferences.