E L Peterson's research while affiliated with Harvard University and other places

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Publications (1)


Generation and coordination of heartbeat timing oscillation in the medicinal leech. I. Oscillation in isolated ganglia
  • Article

April 1983

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24 Reads

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69 Citations

Journal of Neurophysiology

E L Peterson

1. The interactions among the four pairs of interneurons (HN(1)-HN(4)) of the heartbeat timing oscillator are confined to the third and fourth ganglia (G3 and G4). In isolation, G3 and G4 each produces a rhythm essentially the same as that shown when the two ganglia are linked together. 2. The local circuits in both ganglia have the same general form. In both the oscillation centers on a bilateral pair of HN cells that are linked by reciprocal inhibition (the HN(3) pair in G3 and the HN(4) pair in G4). In addition, there is reciprocal inhibition between an HN(3) or HN(4) cell and the intersegmental processes of the ipsilateral HN(1) and HN(2) cells. 3. These connections account for the phase relationships in an isolated G3 or G4, since cells linked by reciprocal inhibition produce bursts in alternation. 4. In isolated ganglia, reciprocal inhibition not only coordinates the activity of the HN cells but also appears to help generate their bursts. 5. Yet reciprocal inhibition alone cannot account for the activity of the network. An endogenous property of the HN(3) and HN(4) cells appears to create the instability necessary for oscillation.

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Citations (1)


... Two segmental oscillators were found in the neuronal network pacing heartbeat in the leech. They are located in the third and fourth ganglia of the ventral nerve chain [3,4]. In order to simulate the respective regimes, Hill et al. modeled a segmental oscillator pacing heartbeat in the leech using Hodgkin-Huxley equations [5]. ...

Reference:

Gradient Trigger Mechanisms Related to Bistability Regimes in a Leech Heartbeat Model
Generation and coordination of heartbeat timing oscillation in the medicinal leech. I. Oscillation in isolated ganglia
  • Citing Article
  • April 1983

Journal of Neurophysiology