I. RECORDING PREPARATIONS
A.
Preparing Microelectrodes
1) Pull,
fill, and test at least 4 microelectrodes. Electrode impedances
of 2-5MW
are ideal, but impedances in the 1-2MW
range are useable.
2) Spare
electrodes may be imbedded in clay in a petri dish container for
storage up to several hours, but are not useable after a day or
more.
B.
Crayfish Surgery
1)
Review the CD video guide for Crawdad Laboratory #9. See also
Appendix A for explanatory figures and a background on the
crayfish superficial abdominal flexor system.
2)
Isolate and pin out a crayfish tail in a Sygard-lined dish, then
immerse it in cold crayfish Ringers. Choose at least two
segments. Make a midline incision trough the cuticle in each
segment to expose the nerve roots. Carefully expose the
superficial flexor muscles on both sides of each segment.
Important things to watch out for in this surgery are:
- use a fresh scalpel blade and keep it flat -
DON'T CUT TOO DEEPLY
- don't damage the muscle insertion line which
runs medio-laterally
- make sure that
IIIs (the third superficial root) is intact and undamaged
If any of
these conditions are not met, then that half-segment cannot be
used.
3) Don't
proceed to the recording phase until you have at least four
intact half-segment muscle exposures.
C.
Recording Setup
1) Turn
on the power to the Model 1600 Neuroprobe Amplifier and allow it
to warm up for 5 minutes. Set all of the switches and knobs for
standard intracellular recording.
2) Turn
on the microscope and fiber-optic lights. Fill an extra Sylgard-lined
recording dish with about 1 cm of cold crayfish Ringers. Place
the reference/ground pellet in the bath.
3) Turn
on the PC, if necessary, and open the Scope program. Under
Display:Computed Functions choose ChA Only. Under
Display:Overlay Stimulator select this option. Set ChA for
monopolar recording, set the Range to 200 mV, but do not
activate any filters. Set up Scope for repetitive sampling at 5
msec/sweep and the maximum sampling rate (40 kHz).
4) Under
the Setup menu of Scope select Stimulator . . ., then set the
stimulator Mode: to Pulse, Delay to 5msec, Duration to 1msec and
Amplitude to about 4 Volts. You will be using the PowerLab
stimulator only to trigger the electronic stimulator. The
output (most importantly the timing) of this stimulator will
appear as a trace across the top of each Scope sweep. Under the
Display menu select Display Settings . . . , then set the
Graticule to a grid pattern and Channel A to an attractive
color. Under the Display menu choose Overlay Stimulator and
place the stimulator trace at the top of the window.
5)
Connect the Output + of the PowerLab box to the TRIGGER IN of
the electronic stimulator with a BNC cable. Connect the output
cable to the stimulator and attach long alligator clip test
leads to each banana plug. Connect the positive (non-tab)
alligator clip to the live lead of the suction electrode.
Connect the negative (tab) alligator clip to the reference lead
of the suction electrode. Using another long alligator clip
connect the black shield lead of the suction electrode to the
cage ground.
6)
Connect the positive output of the stimulator to the PowerLab
CH1+ input and the negative output of the stimulator to the
PowerLab CH1- input, using BNC to double-banana cables.
7) Mount
a filled microelectrode in a half-cell holder and plug the
holder into the Neuroprobe headstage. Lower the microelectrode
into the bath. Adjust the DC OFFSET switch and knob until the
meter reads 000. Retest the electrode and adjust the Cap Comp.
to square up the calibration signal.
8) Check
all for the recording connections and make sure that you know
what each one is for. Now is the time to ask questions.
II.
STIMULATING THE SUPERFICIAL THIRD ROOT AND
RECORDING EVOKED MUSCLE POSTSYNAPTIC POTENTIALS
In this laboratory exercise you will explore another aspect of
the crayfish neuromuscular junction, namely the plasticity or
changeability of the synapses. After demonstrating that you can
elicit PSPs in individual muscle cells by directly stimulating
the third superficial root you will look for evidence for two
neuroplasticity phenomena. The first of these is post-synaptic
(two-pulse) facilitation. The PSP response will tend to increase
in amplitude with each successive stimulus pulse, if successive
stimuli are presented closely enough together. The second
phenomenon is called post-tetanic potentiation and has a longer
time course. If a "tetanizing" train of closely spaced stimuli
are delivered across a synapse, the synapse will be strengthened
for some time afterwards. Again, the methodology for these
experiments will closely follow Crawdad lab exercise #9. |
A. Evoking PSPs
1)
Retract the electrodes from the bath in the empty dish, then
replace this with your prepared crayfish abdomen.
2) As
indicated in Crawdad lab #9, it is best to establish a stable
contact between the suction electrode and the nerve before you
start penetrating muscle cells. Choose a hemi-segment with an
intact IIIs root and undamaged superficial flexor muscle.
Cut the superficial third root near the ganglion. Position
the suction electrode, advance it, and suck up the cut end of
the nerve root. To create a tight seal you may either apply a
small dab of vaseline to the end of the suction
electrode, or advance the tip against the underlying muscle as
you suck in the nerve root.
3)
Position the microelectrode, advance it, and penetrate a muscle
cell. It is best to penetrate the cell near its center. Because
the nerve root has been cut and is not carrying spontaneous APs,
you should not see spontaneous PSPs in the muscle. If you have
an extremely low noise recording you may, however see
spontaneous miniature end-plate potentials (MEPPs) associated
with random presynaptic fusion and release of individual
neurotransmitter vesicles.
4) Once
you have established that you are inside a muscle cell with a
healthy resting potential of at least -40 mV, change the
PowerLab CH B filter setting to AC and range to 10 mV. Slow
the time scale to 50-100 msec (at the maximum sampling rate).
This will highlight the PSPs.
5) Set
the electronic stimulator to produce single 1V x 10 msec
pulses with a minimal delay. Make sure that the stimulator
polarity is set to negative. (You are stimulating the
outside of the nerve fibers so a negative pulse is
depolarizing.) Turn on the electronic stimulator.
6)
Trigger single Scope sweeps using the START button. If each
sweep produces one or more PSPs, reduce the amplitude and/or the
duration of the stimulus pulse until only a single EPSP is
elicited with each sweep. Continue to reduce the stimulus
amplitude/duration to a near-threshold setting. If your initial
stimulus settings are insufficient to produce EPSPs, gradually
increase the intensity of the stimulus pulse. If you have to go
above 10 V, then try another muscle cell. |