Recent studies have established that following an optomotor drum rotating in the direction contralateral to that spontaneously preferred by goldfish fry inverts their motor asymmetry. Studies of the structure of Mauthner neurons (MN) using the histological technique of three-dimensional reconstruction along with measurement of the volumes of the right and left MN in these fish showed that the ipsilateral MN underwent a three-fold reduction in the volume of the ventral dendrite (VD), which was in inverse proportion to the functional activity of the MN. The total volume of the contralateral MN was 25% larger than the volume of the ipsilateral MN, the situation typical of intact fish. It is suggested that the decreases in the size of the VD receiving afferentation from the contralateral eye, which follows the moving band of the optomotor drum, results from the specific contralateral visual stimulation, and is the first evidence of the possible natural stimulation of the MN via the VD.
Adaptation as a memory model appears, at the cellular level, as an increase in the resistivity of neurons to fatigue under the influence of repetitive natural training stimulation. Selective induction of adaptational changes in separate compartments of one and the same neuron can also serve as an important instrument for identification of the roles of these compartments in the integrative function of the individual neuron. Mauthner neurons (MNs) of fishes (the goldfish in particular) possess a clearly differentiated soma and two dendrites, lateral and ventral ones. The soma and lateral dendrite of each MN receive afferentation from the ipsilateral vestibular apparatus; at present, the functional and morphological aspects of selective adaptational modifications induced in these compartments by adequate vestibular stimulation have been examined in detail. As to the ventral MN dendrite receiving visual afferentation from the contralateral eye via the ipsilateral tectum, it remained impossible until now to realize the respective approach. We found that training sessions of visual optokinetic stimulation performed in certain modes provide selective activation of one MN through its ventral dendrite and increase the resistivity of this cell to fatiguing stimulation. Therefore, we first demonstrated the possibility of adaptational changes in an individual ventral dendrite of the MN. If fishes were preliminarily adapted with respect to vestibular stimulation, and the resistivity of the soma and lateral dendrite was selectively increased, the resistivity to fatiguing visual test stimulation also increased. On the other hand, if fishes were preliminarily adapted with respect to visual stimulation, the resistivity to fatiguing vestibular stimulation also increased. The observed increase in the resistivity of MNs of fishes adapted due to sensory stimulation of one afferent input with respect to sensory stimulation of other sensory input, as well as an increase in the resistivity to sensory stimulation of one modality, probably show that the mechanism of increase in the resistivity is the same in both cases.
In goldfish fries, we examined the effect of the optomotor reaction (drive to swim toward moving images of vertical dark bars) on the behavioral motor asymmetry. Contralateral optokinetic stimulation of fishes (rotation of the bars against the direction preferred by fishes in their turnings) gradually smoothed and, later on, inverted the motor asymmetry, while the asymmetry underwent no modifications in the case of ipsilateral optokinetic stimulation (rotation of the bars in the direction similar to that preferred for turnings). Contralateral optokinetic stimulation also induced long-lasting inversion of the motor asymmetry of immobilized fishes deprived of the possibility to follow the movement of bar images. Ipsilateral optokinetic stimulation of fishes with the enucleation of the ipsilateral eye enhanced their motor asymmetry, while contralateral stimulation either did not modify the motor asymmetry of such individuals or inverted this feature. These data agree with the concept that, in fishes, one eye dominates and more actively provides tracking of the movement of bars, while another eye is a subdominant one. In general, we first found that the use of specific visual stimulation allows one to modify for a long time the behavioral motor asymmetry of the fishes, which, as is known, correlates with the morphofunctional asymmetry of Mauthner neurons (MNs). Visual information that activates MNs influences mostly the ventral dendrites of these neurons; thus, our findings allow us to believe that stimulations, which initiate the optomotor reaction, can serve as an adequate physiological model of natural visual stimulation of MNs (with projection of the respective influences on the ventral dendrites of the above cells). The use of such an experimental paradigm opens up new possibilities for studies of the role of these dendrites in the functions of MNs and of the plasticity of morphofunctional organization of these cells.Keywords: free motor behavior of fishes, asymmetry of motor behavior, immobilization, optokinetic stimulation, optomotor reaction, unilateral enucleation of the eye.
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