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The Role Of Behavioral Diversity In Determining The Extent To Which The Cardiac Ganglion Is Modulated In Three Species Of Crab, Grace Bukowski-Thall
The Role Of Behavioral Diversity In Determining The Extent To Which The Cardiac Ganglion Is Modulated In Three Species Of Crab, Grace Bukowski-Thall
Honors Projects
Central pattern generators (CPGs) are neural networks that generate the rhythmic outputs that control behaviors such as locomotion, respiration, and chewing. The stomatogastric nervous system (STNS), which contains the CPGs that control foregut movement, and the cardiac ganglion (CG), which is a CPG that controls heartbeat, are two commonly studied systems in decapod crustaceans. Neuromodulators are locally or hormonally released neuropeptides and amines that change the output patterns of CPGs like the STNS and CG to allow behavioral flexibility. We have hypothesized that neuromodulation provides a substrate for the evolution of behavioral flexibility, and as a result, systems exhibiting more …
Mechanisms Underlying Variable Responses To The Neuropeptide C-Type Allatostatin (Ast-C) Across Isoforms And Among Individuals In The American Lobster, Homarus Americanus, Audrey J. Muscato
Mechanisms Underlying Variable Responses To The Neuropeptide C-Type Allatostatin (Ast-C) Across Isoforms And Among Individuals In The American Lobster, Homarus Americanus, Audrey J. Muscato
Honors Projects
Central pattern generators (CPGs) produce patterned outputs independent of sensory input. The cardiac neuromuscular system of the American lobster (Homarus americanus) is driven by a CPG called the cardiac ganglion (CG), which is composed of nine neurons, making it a model system of study. Modulation of CPGs allows for functional flexibility. One neuropeptide family that modulates the CG is C-type allatostatin (AST-C I-III). Previous research has shown variation in the responses of the CG across the three isoforms and among individuals. First, we investigated why AST-C I and III elicit responses that are more similar to each other than they …