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Dive into the research topics where Dawn M. Blitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawn M. Blitz.


Trends in Neurosciences | 2001

The roles of co-transmission in neural network modulation

Michael P. Nusbaum; Dawn M. Blitz; Andrew M. Swensen; Debra E. Wood; Eve Marder

Neuromodulation provides considerable flexibility to the output of neural networks. In spite of the extensive literature documenting the presence of modulatory peptide co-transmitters in many neurons, considerably less is known about the specific roles of co-transmission in circuit function. This review describes some of the potential consequences of peptide co-transmission in functional circuits, using specific examples from recent work on the actions of identified peptidergic projection neurons acting on the multifunctional neural network within the crustacean stomatogastric ganglion. This system reveals that co-transmission provides projection neurons with a rich assortment of strategies for eliciting multiple outputs from a multifunctional network.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Different Proctolin Neurons Elicit Distinct Motor Patterns from a Multifunctional Neuronal Network

Dawn M. Blitz; Andrew E. Christie; Melissa J. Coleman; Brian J. Norris; Eve Marder; Michael P. Nusbaum

Distinct motor patterns are selected from a multifunctional neuronal network by activation of different modulatory projection neurons. Subsets of these projection neurons can contain the same neuromodulator(s), yet little is known about the relative influence of such neurons on network activity. We have addressed this issue in the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab Cancer borealis. Within this system, there is a neuronal network in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) that produces many versions of the pyloric and gastric mill rhythms. These different rhythms result from activation of different projection neurons that innervate the STG from neighboring ganglia and modulate STG network activity. Three pairs of these projection neurons contain the neuropeptide proctolin. These include the previously identified modulatory proctolin neuron and modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) and the newly identified modulatory commissural neuron 7 (MCN7). We document here that each of these neurons contains a unique complement of cotransmitters and that each of these neurons elicits a distinct version of the pyloric motor pattern. Moreover, only one of them (MCN1) also elicits a gastric mill rhythm. The MCN7-elicited pyloric rhythm includes a pivotal switch by one STG network neuron from playing a minor to a major role in motor pattern generation. Therefore, modulatory neurons that share a peptide transmitter can elicit distinct motor patterns from a common target network.


Neuron | 2002

Contributions of receptor desensitization and saturation to plasticity at the retinogeniculate synapse.

Chinfei Chen; Dawn M. Blitz; Wade G. Regehr

The retinogeniculate synapse conveys visual information from the retina to thalamic relay neurons. Here, we examine the mechanisms of short-term plasticity that can influence transmission at this connection in mouse brain slices. Our studies show that synaptic strength is modified by physiological activity patterns due to marked depression at high frequencies. Postsynaptic mechanisms of plasticity make prominent contributions to this synaptic depression. During trains of retinal input stimulation, receptor desensitization attenuates the AMPA EPSC while the NMDA EPSC saturates. This differential plasticity may help explain the distinct roles of these receptors in shaping the relay neuron response to visual stimulation with the AMPA component being important for transient responses, while sustained high frequency responses rely more on the NMDA component.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Different Sensory Systems Share Projection Neurons But Elicit Distinct Motor Patterns

Dawn M. Blitz; Mark P. Beenhakker; Michael P. Nusbaum

Considerable research has focused on issues pertaining to sensorimotor integration, but in most systems precise information remains unavailable regarding the specific pathways by which different sensory systems regulate any single central pattern-generating circuit. We address this issue by determining how two muscle stretch-sensitive neurons, the gastropyloric receptor neurons (GPRs), influence identified projection neurons that regulate the gastric mill circuit in the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab and then comparing these actions with those of the ventral cardiac neuron (VCN) mechanosensory system. Here, we show that the GPR neurons activate the gastric mill rhythm in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) via their excitation of two identified projection neurons, modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1) and commissural projection neuron 2 (CPN2), in the commissural ganglion. Support for this conclusion comes from the ability of the modulatory proctolin neuron (MPN), a projection neuron that suppresses the gastric mill rhythm via its inhibitory actions on MCN1 and CPN2, to inhibit the GPR-elicited gastric mill rhythm. Selective elimination of MCN1 and CPN2 access to the STG also prevents GPR activation of this rhythm. The VCN neurons also elicit the gastric mill rhythm by coactivating MCN1 and CPN2, but the GPR-elicited gastric mill rhythm is distinct. These distinct rhythms are likely to result partly from different MCN1 activity levels under these two conditions and partly from the presence of additional GPR actions in the STG. These results support the hypothesis that different sensory systems differentially regulate neuronal circuit activity despite their convergent actions on a single subpopulation of projection neurons.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2004

SHORT-TERM SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY: A COMPARISON OF TWO SYNAPSES

Dawn M. Blitz; Kelly A. Foster; Wade G. Regehr

During physiological patterns of activity, synaptic activity is regulated by many forms of short-term plasticity. Here, we compare the functional consequences of such plasticity at the synapse from the climbing fibre to the Purkinje cell in the cerebellum and at the synapse between the retinal ganglion cell and the thalamocortical relay neuron in the lateral geniculate nucleus. Despite superficial similarities between these two powerful synapses, they have distinctive synaptic plasticity. The climbing fibre synapse is highly reliable but accomplishes this through many synaptic specializations. However, the retinogeniculate synapse dynamically regulates the flow of visual information by using two types of receptor that have different types of plasticity. These synapses illustrate the important functional consequences of synaptic plasticity.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2012

Neuropeptide modulation of microcircuits.

Michael P. Nusbaum; Dawn M. Blitz

Neuropeptides provide functional flexibility to microcircuits, their inputs and effectors by modulating presynaptic and postsynaptic properties and intrinsic currents. Recent studies have relied less on applied neuropeptide and more on their neural release. In rhythmically active microcircuits (central pattern generators, CPGs), recent studies show that neuropeptide modulation can enable particular activity patterns by organizing specific circuit motifs. Neuropeptides can also modify microcircuit output indirectly, by modulating circuit inputs. Recently elucidated consequences of neuropeptide modulation include changes in motor patterns and behavior, stabilization of rhythmic motor patterns and changes in CPG sensitivity to sensory input. One aspect of neuropeptide modulation that remains enigmatic is the presence of multiple peptide family members in the same nervous system and even the same neurons.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2011

Neural Circuit Flexibility in a Small Sensorimotor System

Dawn M. Blitz; Michael P. Nusbaum

Neuronal circuits underlying rhythmic behaviors (central pattern generators: CPGs) can generate rhythmic motor output without sensory input. However, sensory input is pivotal for generating behaviorally relevant CPG output. Here we discuss recent work in the decapod crustacean stomatogastric nervous system (STNS) identifying cellular and synaptic mechanisms whereby sensory inputs select particular motor outputs from CPG circuits. This includes several examples in which sensory neurons regulate the impact of descending projection neurons on CPG circuits. This level of analysis is possible in the STNS due to the relatively unique access to identified circuit, projection, and sensory neurons. These studies are also revealing additional degrees of freedom in sensorimotor integration that underlie the extensive flexibility intrinsic to rhythmic motor systems.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2008

A Newly Identified Extrinsic Input Triggers a Distinct Gastric Mill Rhythm via Activation of Modulatory Projection Neurons

Dawn M. Blitz; Rachel S. White; Shari R. Saideman; Aaron Cook; Andrew E. Christie; Farzan Nadim; Michael P. Nusbaum

SUMMARY Neuronal network flexibility enables animals to respond appropriately to changes in their internal and external states. We are using the isolated crab stomatogastric nervous system to determine how extrinsic inputs contribute to network flexibility. The stomatogastric system includes the well-characterized gastric mill (chewing) and pyloric (filtering of chewed food) motor circuits in the stomatogastric ganglion. Projection neurons with somata in the commissural ganglia (CoGs) regulate these rhythms. Previous work characterized a unique gastric mill rhythm that occurred spontaneously in some preparations, but whose origin remained undetermined. This rhythm includes a distinct protractor phase activity pattern, during which a key gastric mill circuit neuron (LG neuron) and the projection neurons MCN1 and CPN2 fire in a pyloric rhythm-timed activity pattern instead of the tonic firing pattern exhibited by these neurons during previously studied gastric mill rhythms. Here we identify a new extrinsic input, the post-oesophageal commissure (POC) neurons, relatively brief stimulation (30 s) of which triggers a long-lasting (tens of minutes) activation of this novel gastric mill rhythm at least in part via its lasting activation of MCN1 and CPN2. Immunocytochemical and electrophysiological data suggest that the POC neurons excite MCN1 and CPN2 by release of the neuropeptide Cancer borealis tachykinin-related peptide Ia (CabTRP Ia). These data further suggest that the CoG arborization of the POC neurons comprises the previously identified anterior commissural organ (ACO), a CabTRP Ia-containing neurohemal organ. This endocrine organ thus appears to also have paracrine actions, including activation of a novel and lasting gastric mill rhythm.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Convergent Motor Patterns from Divergent Circuits

Shari R. Saideman; Dawn M. Blitz; Michael P. Nusbaum

Neuromodulation changes the cellular and synaptic properties of neurons, thereby enabling individual neuronal circuits to generate multiple activity patterns. However, distinct modulatory inputs could conceivably also cona different motor circuits to generate similar activity patterns. Using the isolated stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the crab Cancer borealis, we showed previously that pyrokinin (PK) peptides activate the gastric mill (chewing) rhythm without the participation of the projection neuron modulatory commissural neuron 1 (MCN1). MCN1, which does not contain the PK peptide, also activates the gastric mill rhythm and, at these times, is a gastric mill central pattern generator (CPG) neuron. Here, we show that the gastric mill rhythms elicited by PK superfusion and MCN1 stimulation in the isolated STG are comparable, in contrast to the distinct gastric mill rhythms elicited by other input pathways. We also identified several cellular and synaptic mechanisms underlying the PK- and MCN1-elicited gastric mill rhythms that are distinct, including additional differences in their core CPG neurons. For example, the presence of the inhibitory synapse from the pyloric pacemaker neuron anterior burster onto the gastric mill CPG was necessary only for generation of the PK-elicited gastric mill rhythm. Similarly, the dorsal gastric motor neuron regulated only the PK rhythm, apparently because of PK-mediated enhancement of its synaptic actions. Thus, we demonstrate that different modulatory inputs can elicit comparable, as well as distinct activity patterns from the same neuronal ensemble. Moreover, these comparable rhythms can result from distinct CPGs using overlapping, but distinct sets of cellular and synaptic mechanisms.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Modulation of Circuit Feedback Specifies Motor Circuit Output

Dawn M. Blitz; Michael P. Nusbaum

Bidirectional communication (i.e., feedforward and feedback pathways) between functional levels is common in neural systems, but in most systems little is known regarding the function and modifiability of the feedback pathway. We are exploring this issue in the crab (Cancer borealis) stomatogastric nervous system by examining bidirectional communication between projection neurons and their target central pattern generator (CPG) circuit neurons. Specifically, we addressed the question of whether the peptidergic post-oesophageal commissure (POC) neurons trigger a specific gastric mill (chewing) motor pattern in the stomatogastric ganglion solely by activating projection neurons, or by additionally altering the strength of CPG feedback to these projection neurons. The POC-triggered gastric mill rhythm is shaped by feedback inhibition onto projection neurons from a CPG neuron. Here, we establish that POC stimulation triggers a long-lasting enhancement of feedback-mediated IPSC/Ps in the projection neurons, which persists for the same duration as POC-gastric mill rhythms. This strengthened CPG feedback appears to result from presynaptic modulation, because it also occurs in other projection neurons whose activity does not change after POC stimulation. To determine the function of this strengthened feedback synapse, we compared the influence of dynamic-clamp-injected feedback IPSPs of pre- and post-POC amplitude into a pivotal projection neuron after POC stimulation. Only the post-POC amplitude IPSPs elicited the POC-triggered activity pattern in this projection neuron and enabled full expression of the POC-gastric mill rhythm. Thus, the strength of CPG feedback to projection neurons is modifiable and can be instrumental to motor pattern selection.

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Rachel S. White

University of Pennsylvania

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