Altered excitability of the crayfish lateral giant escape reflex during agonistic encounters.

F B Krasne, A Shamsian, R Kulkarni
Author Information
  1. F B Krasne: Department of Psychology and Brain-Research Institute, University of California at Los Angeles 90095-1563, USA.

Abstract

The excitability of the lateral giant escape reflex of socially dominant and submissive crayfish at rest and during agonistic encounters was studied and compared. During agonistic encounters the excitability of the lateral giant reflex falls, substantially in subordinates and slightly in dominants, whereas at rest excitability seems to be independent of social status. Thus, paradoxically, socially dominant animals are more likely to execute lateral giant escape reactions during interactions than are subordinates. It is suggested that subordinates under threat of attack tend to engage circuitry involved in flexible, nonreflex ("voluntary") types of escape not mediated by giant neurons and therefore inhibit giant neuron-mediated reflex circuitry that produces prompt, but less adaptive, responses. In contrast, dominants go about their business, mainly ignoring their conspecifics and relying on reflex escape to protect them from unexpected attack. Consistent with this view, escape of subordinates during agonistic encounters is mediated by nongiant, not reflex, circuitry. These observations and their interpretation suggest a possible functional role for recently described social status-dependent serotonergic modulation of the lateral giant reflex, which is inhibitory in sign in subordinates and facilitatory in dominants.

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Grants

  1. NS8108/NINDS NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Agonistic Behavior
Animals
Astacoidea
Escape Reaction
Interneurons
Locomotion
Neurons, Afferent
Reaction Time
Reflex
Serotonin
Social Dominance
Tail
gamma-Aminobutyric Acid

Chemicals

Serotonin
gamma-Aminobutyric Acid

Word Cloud

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