SUMMARY
Previous studies describe six factors accounting for interspecific diversity of electric organ discharge (EOD) waveforms in Gymnotus. At the cellular level, three factors determine the locally generated waveforms: (1) electrocyte geometry and channel repertoire; (2) the localization of synaptic contacts on electrocyte surfaces; and (3) electric activity of electromotor axons preceding the discharge of electrocytes. At the organismic level, three factors determine the integration of the EOD as a behavioral unit: (4) the distribution of different types of electrocytes and specialized passive tissue forming the electric organ (EO); (5) the neural mechanisms of electrocyte discharge coordination; and (6) post-effector mechanisms. Here, we reconfirm the importance of the first five of these factors based on comparative studies of a wider diversity of Gymnotus than previously investigated. Additionally, we report a hitherto unseen aspect of EOD diversity in Gymnotus. The central region of the EO (which has the largest weight on the conspecific-received field) usually exhibits a negative–positive–negative pattern where the delay between the early negative and positive peaks (determined by neural coordination mechanisms) matches the delay between the positive and late negative peaks (determined by electrocyte responsiveness). Because delays between peaks typically determine the peak power frequency, this matching implies a co-evolution of neural and myogenic coordination mechanisms in determining the spectral specificity of the intraspecific communication channel. Finally, we define four functional species groups based on EO/EOD structure. The first three exhibit a heterogeneous EO in which doubly innervated electrocytes are responsible for a main triphasic complex. Group I species exhibit a characteristic cephalic extension of the EO. Group II species exhibit an early positive component of putative neural origin, and strong EO auto-excitability. Group III species exhibit an early, slow, negative wave of abdominal origin, and variation in EO auto-excitability. Representatives of Group IV generate a unique waveform comprising a main positive peak followed by a small, load-dependent negative component.
INTRODUCTION
The genus Gymnotus includes 37 species, distributed from Uruguay to as far north as southern Mexico (Crampton, 2011). These fishes, like other members of the order Gymnotiformes, exhibit the unusual ability to generate electric fields from a specialized electric organ (EO) controlled by the nervous system (Lissmann, 1958; Caputi et al., 2005; Caputi, 2011). The field generated by the electric organ discharge (EOD) is affected by the presence of nearby objects. Changes to the ongoing transcutaneous fields (electric images) are evaluated by an electrosensory array, allowing the fish to analyze the structure of nearby objects (Pereira and Caputi, 2010). In Gymnotus, the EOD field comprises a continuous train of pulses. Each pulse in the series is characterized by a stereotyped, species-specific waveform which serves as a communication signal (i.e. for mate attraction), in addition to its role as an electrolocation carrier (Black-Cleworth, 1970; Westby, 1974; McGregor and Westby, 1992; Crampton and Albert, 2006; Crampton et al., 2008; Crampton et al., 2011).
It has been proposed (Bennett and Grundfest, 1959; Bennett, 1971; Macadar, 1993; Caputi, 1994; Caputi, 1999; Caputi et al., 2005; Rodríguez-Cattáneo, 2009) that the structure and specificity of the EOD field waveform in pulse fish depends on variation in six different factors. Three of these, occurring at the cellular level of organization, determine the locally generated waveforms: (1) the geometry and channel repertoire of myogenic electrocytes; (2) the localization of the synaptic contacts on electrocytes surface; and (3) the synchronous activity of a large bundle of electromotor axons preceding the discharge of electrocytes. The other three factors determine, at an organismal level, the integration of the EOD as a behavioral unit: (4) the distribution of different electrocyte types and specialized passive tissue forming the EO; (5) the neural mechanisms of coordination of electrocyte activity; and (6) the geometry and conductance of surrounding tissues. This last factor determines the post-effector mechanisms of current summation along the fish's body and is essential to understanding how the electromotive force (EMF) pattern is transformed into an electric field in water (Caputi and Budelli, 1995; Aguilera et al., 2001; Caputi and Budelli, 2006).
The influence of these six kinds of variation on EOD waveform has been well documented by a long series of studies involving cellular and integrative analysis of the EOD in the model species Gymnotus omarorum (Trujillo-Cenóz et al., 1984; Lorenzo et al., 1988; Lorenzo et al., 1990; Lorenzo et al., 1993; Trujillo-Cenóz and Echagüe, 1989; Macadar et al., 1989; Caputi and Trujillo-Cenóz, 1994; Caputi and Budelli, 1995; Sierra et al., 1995; Sierra et al., 2005; Caputi et al., 1989; Caputi et al., 1993; Caputi and Aguilera, 1996; Castelló et al., 2000; Aguilera et al., 2001; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). Comparative studies of other species have allowed us to describe an additional type of EO organization that influences the EOD field and its waveform. In Gymnotus coropinae (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008; Castelló et al., 2009) we observed a unique pattern comprising a rostral extension of the hypaxial EO below the cleithrum aponeuroses. In this region of the EO, the electrocytes are large, few in number, and may be distinguished by their characteristic shape and innervation patterns (Castelló et al., 2009). In another study of an as-yet-undescribed species (G. n. sp. ‘itu’), we showed that the EO auto-excitability suffices to explain the difference in waveform between two species whose EO and EOD are similar, except for late wave components resulting from the propagation of the action potential through the electrocyte membrane (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). Finally, in specimens of G. carapo from Suriname (G. carapo SU), we observed that the early positive component (which occurs only 1.5 ms after the pacemaker discharge at ~200 mm caudal to the pacemaker location) is too early to be generated by myogenic mechanisms. This component is instead more likely the result of synchronized activity of the posterior electromotor nerve (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008).
In this paper we test the hypothesis that signal diversity in Gymnotus may be explained by variation in the anatomo-functional features described above, and evaluate the role of the first five of the six factors previously recognized as determinants of interspecific waveform variation. Combining data from the seven species reported here with the four species studied earlier, we have now compiled electrophysiological and anatomical surveys for 11 species – including representatives of two (G1 clade and G. carapo clade) of the three major lineages of Gymnotus [G1 clade, G2 clade and G. carapo clade (sensu Lovejoy et al., 2010)]. Besides obtaining data that confirm the first five factors listed above as important determinants of EOD diversity, our observations also indicate, for the first time, that the sharpness of the power spectra and the peak power frequency is determined by the co-evolution of neural coordination mechanisms and electrocyte responsiveness.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals
Specimens of G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’, G. curupira and G. javari were collected from rainforest creeks in the vicinity of the Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonia Peruana at Jenaro Herrera, Loreto, Peru (04°54′S, 73°39′W) by W.G.R.C. Authorization for field collections was provided by the Ministerio de La Producción (Resolución Directorial no. 546-2009-PRODUCE/DGEPP, 22 July 2009, Lima, Perú). Specimens of G. obscurus, G. tigre and G. varzea were collected from floodplain habitats of the Rio Amazonas within 50 km of the city of Iquitos, Loreto, Peru (03°45′S, 73°15′W) by a local fish dealer. Specimens of G. sylvius were obtained from the Rio Paraná by local dealers in Esquina, Argentina.
All specimens were identified unambiguously to species by W.G.R.C. on the basis of external morphology, and by comparison to the primary types. Peruvian specimens reported here as G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’ closely resembled those studied previously from Suriname [the region of the type locality for G. carapo (Albert and Crampton, 2003)] in both morphology and head-to-tail EOD (see Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008), but this species complex is the subject of ongoing taxonomic revision. For clarity we refer to G. carapo from Suriname as G. carapo SU.
We studied a total of 158 specimens: six G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’ [70–247 mm total length (TL)], nine G. curupira (120–219 mm TL), 119 G. javari (85–240 mm TL), one G. obscurus (170 mm TL), 20 G. sylvius (196–420 mm TL), two G. tigre (230–260 mm TL) and one G. varzea (180 mm TL).
All experiments were either non-invasive or terminal. Protocols were approved by the Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas Clemente Estable (Comisión de Bioética 001/03/2011) and the University of Central Florida Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (protocol no. 06-33W). They also followed the guidelines of the Comisión Honoraria de Experimentación Animal (Universidad de la República, Uruguay), the Society for Neuroscience and the International Guiding Principles for Biomedical Research Involving Animals. Following recordings, fish were killed by an overdose of pentobarbital (2 mg, repeated if necessary up to apnea and EOD cessation) and fixed for taxonomic or anatomical analyses as described below.
Evaluation of head-to-tail EODs
Far fields generated by the EODs [head-to-tail EOD-associated field (htEOD)] were recorded in water at standardized temperature (27±0.1°C) and conductivity (55±1 μS cm−1). Each fish was allowed 5 min to acclimate to the aquarium. The recording arena was 80 cm long by 40 cm wide, and filled to 36 cm depth. Individual fish were placed within a nylon-mesh sock supported by a mesh cradle suspended in mid-water (17 cm depth) and positioned equidistant from the tank ends and walls. Signals were captured using nickel chromium electrodes placed at the tank ends. The electrodes were connected to a wide-band (0.1 Hz to 30 kHz) AC-coupled differential amplifier (Signal Recovery 5113, AMETEK, Oak Ridge, TN, USA). htEODs were digitized using an NI-USB 6216 digitizer (National Instruments, Austin, TX, USA) at a sampling rate of 200 kHz and a resolution of 16 bits. Measurements of peak power frequency and signal duration were made using custom-written MATLAB and Java software designed by W.G.R.C. htEOD durations were calculated with the beginning and end of the htEOD taken at a 1% threshold of the amplitude of the normalized dominant positive phase. Spectral power densities were calculated from 65,536-point fast Fourier transform. htEOD amplitude was measured as mV cm−1at 10 cm at a standardized conductivity of 55 μS cm−1 following the procedure described by Franchina and Stoddard (Franchina and Stoddard, 1998). Specimens retained for taxonomic analysis alone were fixed with 10% formalin for 3–14 days, preserved in 70% ethyl alcohol and deposited as voucher specimens at the Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru, and at the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Detailed spatial analysis of the EOD
For four G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’, six G. curupira, eight G. javari, one G. obscurus, 20 G. sylvius, two G. tigre and one G. varzea, the single air gap procedure was utilized to characterize the net head-to-tail EMF of the EOD, and the multiple air gap procedure was utilized to characterize the detailed spatio-temporal patterns of the equivalent EMF.
The single air gap procedure consists of the simultaneous recording of the current and voltage drop across resistors connected between the head and the tail of the fish when it is suspended in air (Caputi et al., 1989). By changing the value of such resistance (Ro) we constructed a separate characteristic curve for the peak of each of the phases of alternating polarity in the EOD (its characteristic curve) (Caputi et al., 1989; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009).
The ordinate intersection represents the peak EMF (which is different for each wave) and the absolute value of the slope represents the internal resistance [Ri; in general very similar across waves (Cox and Coates, 1938)]. In some species, wave components resulting from the activation of the electrocytes by the immediately preceding wave components show a parabolic relationship between current and voltage. This indicates a low excitability of the electrogenic membranes subservient to such components (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009).
The multiple air gap procedure allowed us to compare EOD waveforms generated by different regions of the fish's body (Caputi et al., 1993). Fish were suspended in air using a custom-made apparatus that holds the fish on a grill-like array of parallel wires. The wires in contact with the skin were perpendicular to the main axis of the body, one at each end of the fish and the other at the limits of each of the explored regions. Voltages were simultaneously recorded between pairs of wires, amplified to reach adequate amplitude for similar quantization (bit resolution always larger than 8 bits), sampled at 25 kHz and analyzed using custom MATLAB software (written by E.C. and A.R.-C.). For the purposes of this investigation, seven regions of the fish's body were considered; their lengths were adapted to cover the whole length of the fish. Because of the different origins of the wave components, several recordings were obtained for each fish with different configurations before finding the montage yielding the most representative picture of the EOD pattern. In general, regions showing larger changes in EMF for any of the components were explored with a greater resolution. The length of the six caudal regions varied in integer multiples of 1 cm. The remaining rostral portion corresponded to the rest of the fish.
In the multiple air gap condition, load is absent. Therefore, voltage recordings are considered good estimators of the equivalent electromotive forces generated by different portions of the fish's body for the components that are directly activated by synaptic action. To compare the expression of EO activation mechanisms from diverse regions (with different spacing between electrodes, i.e. gap length), we measured the amplitude of each peak and then normalized this amplitude by the length of the gap, expressed as a percentage of total length.
Additional electrophysiological techniques
The EMF pattern of two species (G. javari and G. obscurus) showed specific features that could not be assessed completely by the multiple air gap method. (1) At the head and abdominal region of G. javari we found a complex EOD, suggesting the presence of an expansion of the EO behind the cleithrum-opercular aponeuroses, as previously described in G. coropinae (Castelló et al., 2009). (2) In G. obscurus, we noted what we will henceforth describe as a ‘facultative monophasic EOD’, with a dominant positive component followed by a much lower-amplitude negative component, the amplitude of which is strongly dependent on the external load (Bell et al., 1976; Caputi et al., 1998; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). To accommodate these novel features, three specimens of G. javari were explored with smaller size gaps (1 cm, starting from the snout) and one specimen using near-field recordings with the fish in water (see Near-field analysis, below). In G. obscurus, a differential load procedure was applied (see Simple air gap method with differential load, below).
Near-field analysis
Near-field analysis was performed to confirm the presence of electrogenic sources at the head region as well as body sources of opposite polarity that are activated synchronously. Electric fields produced by the EOD were recorded with the fish resting in the middle of a net pen spanning two ends of a plastic tank (45×26 cm filled with water up to 4 cm depth, with conductivity 30 μS cm−1, temperature 24°C). The back and forth movements of fish were minimized using stitches to adjust the net to body length. We recorded two variables: (1) the longitudinal EOD field using two silver electrodes, each one of them placed at the center of each narrow face of the tank, parallel to the mid-line of the fish (i.e. one in front of the head and the other behind the tail); and (2) the potential gradient perpendicular to the side of the body (near field), measured along a line parallel to the fish skin at 2 mm distance from the closest point. Exploring electrode tips (2.5 mm apart, perpendicularly aligned to the body axis) were moved from head to tail at a slow and constant speed using a motorized driver, the position of which was continuously monitored. The voltage drop between exploring electrodes was measured using a high-input impedance, high-gain differential amplifier (10 Hz to 20 kHz band-pass filter, in-house constructed), and was digitized using a National Instruments 6016B digitizer at a sampling rate of 50 kHz and a resolution of 16 bits. For the analysis, we constructed a matrix where columns represent epochs of 10 ms before and 10 ms after the peak of the head-to-tail EOD taken every 1 mm (±200 μm) along the recording line. These measurements allowed us to qualitatively estimate (because distance was not perfectly constant due to the curvature of the body) the current density flowing outward and inward to the fish at different times and at different sites along the body.
Simple air gap method with differential load
The tail region of the biphasic G. obscurus specimen was further explored using a variation of the simple air gap method (Bell et al., 1976; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). We split the load into two parallel ‘one-way’ paths of opposite direction using germanium diodes. By differentially changing the load on each branch we were able to explore the efficacy of the longitudinal currents associated with the main positive peak (V3) for eliciting the late negative peak (V4) at the tail region. While one diode allows the current generating V3 (I3) to flow through an externally controlled resistive path and block the current generating V4 (I4), the other allows the circulation of I4 through another externally controlled path, blocking I3. It is important to note that when the absolute values of peak voltages are lower than the cut-off threshold of the diodes (300 mV), current does not circulate in any direction. However, when the absolute values of peak voltages are larger than the diode threshold, they are controlled by the external load. We used an 11-position step switch to modify an external load connected in series with a diode oriented in such a way that allowed only the flow of I3. Thus, for a given position of the step switch we clamped the peak value of I3. For each of the 11 positions of the switch (i.e. for each value of I3) we explored the voltage–current relationship of V4 by varying the resistance of a rheostat connected in series with the second diode. At the end of this series of experiments, we obtained 11 characteristic curves, one for each position of the switch. Because we found that voltage current was well fitted by a linear decreasing function (see Results) we were able to estimate the EMF generating V4 for each clamped value of I3.
Anatomy and innervation of the electrogenic tissue
One or two specimens of each species were fixed after euthanasia. The structure of the EO and the distribution of the thin nerve bundles, as well as the arrangement of the electromotor nerve terminals on the electrocytes' surface, were studied using silver-impregnated samples. For this purpose, after a combined fixation and decalcification step [using De Castro's formula (Ramón y Cajal and De Castro, 1933)], a portion of the middle part of the body and a portion of the tail were impregnated with silver (AgNO3, 1.5%, 7 days at 37°C) and subsequently reduced in formaldehyde–hydroquinone. Tissues were embedded in a soft mixture of epoxy resin and sectioned (30 μm thick) either frontally or parasagittally. In two G. javari specimens, the whole head and abdominal wall was fixed in formalin as a single piece. After decalcification, the cranium was removed. The remaining mandibular and abdominal wall regions were sectioned horizontally (200 μm) to search for a possible portion of the EO extending into the head region as suggested by the electrophysiology. Sections were stained with a solution of Methylene Blue (1%), dehydrated and mounted in resin. All slides were explored under a light microscope and digitally converted using a variety of optical and digital camera resolutions.
Nomenclature of waveform components
For the detailed spatial analysis of the EOD we use the wave components nomenclature introduced by Trujillo-Cenóz et al. (Trujillo-Cenóz et al., 1984) for G. omarorum (Richer de Forges et al., 2009) with amendments by Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al. (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008). In Fig. 1 we describe the correspondence between this nomenclature and that introduced by Crampton and Albert (Crampton and Albert, 2006) for the far-field head-to-tail recordings. It is important to note that the nomenclature of the wave components is not only based on the electrophysiological recordings, but we also take into account the presence of anatomical data, suggesting by spatial correlation a generation mechanism. For each region we identified the main positive component (defined as V3) and verified that it was accompanied by caudally innervated electrocytes. Second, in traces where a negative peak preceded V3, we identified the presence of rostrally innervated electrocytes to define this peak as V2. Taking into account the curarization experiment [reported elsewhere (Caputi et al., 1989; Caputi et al., 1994; Caputi and Aguilera, 1996; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009)] in which the activity following V3 was shown to be the consequence of electrocyte responsiveness, we defined the first negativity after V3 as V4, and the first positivity after V3 as V5. In the case of V1, we found two slow waves: one originated at the head (V1r) and another (positive) originated at the limit between the central and caudal region of the body. Finally, we found a particular V3 associated with the presence of a rostral extension of the EO; this was studied in detail elsewhere and is referred to as V3r (Castelló et al., 2009).
RESULTS
Far-field head-to-tail EOD recorded in water
All species of Gymnotus exhibit a main positive wave peak (V3) followed by a negative peak of species-dependent amplitude and duration (V4; Fig. 1). Gymnotus obscurus differs from all other congeners in exhibiting a quasi-monophasic EOD in which the V3 peak is followed by a very low-amplitude, load-dependent V4 peak. In all the remaining species, the EOD starts with slow negative components of low amplitude (V1r), and the V3 peak is preceded by a negative peak (V2). A low-amplitude, late positive component (V5) is present in G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’, G. javari, G. sylvius and G. tigre and facultative in G. curupira (six out of nine specimens). An early positive component (V1ct) was observed in G. n. sp. ‘carapo PE’, G. sylvius and G. varzea. Finally, likely associated with sexual differentiation (Crampton et al., 2011), we observed differences in the amplitude of V4 in G. javari and G. curupira. Metrics on the amplitudes of each peak as well as the peak power frequency of the recorded head-to-tail EODs are presented in Table 1.
Spatiotemporal pattern of EMF and its anatomical correlates
In the following sections we describe in detail the spatial analysis of the EOD waveforms and their morphological correlates for the seven newly studied species reported here.
Gymnotus n. sp. ‘carapo PE’
The head-to-tail EOD waveform of this species recorded in air is hexaphasic, with the waveforms closely resembling those of G. carapo SU (see Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008).
Before the principal peak (V3) occurs (Fig. 2A), there is a series of deflections comprising a brief low-amplitude positive phase (V1ct) flanked by two negative phases, V1r and V2 (see Fig. 2B at another scale for the detailed pattern). After the main positive peak there is a sharp negative wave (V4) followed by a smooth positive wave (V5). With the multiple air gap method (Fig. 2C), these components can be identified as independent because, although they partially overlap in time, their spatial domains are clearly confined to discrete regions at different positions along the body coinciding with a plausible anatomical subtract for explaining their generation.
As in most species of Gymnotus, V1 is generated in the abdominal region and V2 in the central part of the body (Fig. 2C–F). Accordingly, at abdominal and central regions of the EO, Cajal's silver impregnations (Fig. 2G) show very large doubly innervated electrocytes. The early positive component (V1ct; Fig. 2C, arrow) is generated at approximately the transition between the central and tail regions of the fish's body. The very early appearance of this component, and the presence of a large posterior electromotor nerve at the generation site, suggest a possible neural origin. The three last wave components (V3, V4 and V5) are generated all along the EO, receiving the contribution of caudally innervated electrocytes mainly at the tail, where they are more densely packed (Fig. 2D–H). Peak amplitude measured in volts per unit length of the recorded portion increases with electrocyte density in a rostro-caudal direction along the domain of every component except V1r and V1ct, which are instead very localized (Fig. 2D–H).
Gymnotus curupira
This species is tetraphasic. The EMF pattern generated by this species is similar to that shown by G. omarorum, although the amplitude of the EOD in G. curupira is weaker than in G. omarorum (Caputi et al., 1993; Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009) for every component, and the regional waveforms have a higher peak power in every region of the body (Fig. 3). Anatomical studies suggest that V1 is generated at the abdominal region by the rostral faces of doubly innervated electrocytes; V2 is generated at the central region by the rostral faces of very large doubly innervated electrocytes at the central region of the EO (Fig. 3A,B); and the complex V3 and V4 along the entire EO is generated by all electrocytes (Fig. 3C–E). Peak amplitude measured in volts per unit length of the recorded portion increases in a rostro-caudal direction along the domain of every component (Fig. 3C,D). In some specimens V4 ends with a gradual decline in voltage, as does the V4 component of G. omarorum, but in others there is a clear V5.
Gymnotus javari
The spatiotemporal pattern of EMF and the anatomy of G. javari are much closer to those documented in G. coropinae (Castelló et al., 2009; Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008) than to other species (Fig. 4A).
Electrogeneration starts at the head, where a very slow head negative component (V1r) is followed by a head positive peak (V3r; Fig. 4A,B). A multiple air gap with 1 cm resolution showed that these components are generated at the peri-opercular region (Fig. 4B). Fig. 4C, D and E illustrate the amplitude of the regionally generated EMF for V2, V3 and V4, respectively, as a function of the distance from the snout.
Consistently, anatomy revealed electrocytes in the posterior region of the head. Fig. 5A shows a ventral view of the superimposed traces, outlining the electrogenic structures observed in serial horizontal sections of the abdominal wall and floor of the mouth. As observed in the horizontal and oblique sections (Fig. 5B), a row of electrocytes is aligned parallel to the aponeurotic sheath connecting the operculum to the cleithrum. At approximately the midline, another pair of longitudinal rows of electrocytes (continuing the abdominal regions of the EO) converges with these two oblique rows to form an arrow-like profile (Fig. 5A). The quality of our material was not sufficient to analyze the innervation pattern of this portion of the EO. However, comparative analysis with G. coropinae and near-field recordings (see below) suggest that these portions are responsible for the slow and rostral V1r–V3r complex. The pattern observed at the central and caudal regions of the body (Fig. 5C) can be explained as in other multiphasic species. A dorsal row of long, doubly innervated electrocytes, present from the abdominal to the tail region, may explain V2. However, one must remark that in this species, V2 has two peaks at different distances from the snout (25% and 75% of fish length, respectively; Fig. 4C). The caudal quarter of the body has four similar rows of small caudally innervated electrocytes with smaller inter-electrocyte distances (Fig. 5D). Finally, the complex V3-4-5 extends from the abdominal region to the tip of the tail and increases in amplitude in a rostro-caudal direction (Fig. 5C,D).
Our discovery of electrogenic tissue extending rostrally into the head region motivated us to illustrate a higher resolution electrophysiological analysis of the near field in detail (Fig. 6). Recordings of near fields adjacent to the fish's body taken perpendicular to the skin confirmed the hypothesis that the very early negative potential (V1r) is generated at the rostral expansion of the EO (Fig. 6A,B). The field is very complex at the time labeled as t2 in Fig. 6A,C. Rostrally, it shows two reversal points flanking a large sink, with the rostral source sharply localized and the caudal source exhibiting two maxima. These findings suggest that the near field around the head is dominated by the local generators. This local field has important differences with the far field (Fig. 5A, inset), which is instead dominated by the generators at the central and tail regions of the fish's body and yields the main components V3, V4 and V5 (t3–t6 in Fig. 5D–G).
Gymnotus obscurus
The single specimen available for this species exhibited a biphasic head-to-tail EOD in the simple air gap comprising a dominant positive component (V3) followed by a low-amplitude negative component (V4; Fig. 7A, inset). The negative component (V4) was load-dependent, such that with decreasing external resistance exhibited a mild increase in amplitude (Fig. 7A inset; compare black trace under low resistance load and red trace under high resistance load). This different behavior of V3 and V4 are described by the characteristic curves (Fig. 7A,B, respectively). This motivated the detailed analysis of this feature under the differential load procedure introduced by Bell et al. (Bell et al., 1976) and applied by Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009) for the analysis of a similar problem in the tail region of G. omarorum. Clamping the longitudinal current associated with V3 (I3), we were able to construct 10 different characteristic curves of V4 (for clarity, only five graphs were superimposed in Fig. 7C). The slopes of these plots are similar, and the ordinate values of the fitting lines increase with I3 (Fig. 7D). This confirms that V4 is load dependent and indicates that the auto-excitability of the EO in this species is markedly lower than in other species of Gymnotus.
The multiple air gap procedure demonstrated that G. obscurus has two wave components: a large positive component (V3), and a very small negative, load-dependent component (V4). The spatiotemporal pattern of electromotive force (Fig. 7E) shows that V3 is generated all along the EO and increases exponentially from head to tail, while V4 is generated at the caudal third of the fish's body. In this caudal third, the ratio V4/V3 also increases in a rostro-caudal direction.
A single sample of the central region of the EO of this specimen was analyzed anatomically. In this sample, we found four rows of flat electrocytes on each side. We were unable to find rostral innervation of the electrocytes of the dorsal row of the EO (Fig. 7F).
Gymnotus sylvius
Similarly to G. carapo SU, the head-to-tail EOD waveform of this species recorded in air by the single air gap method is hexaphasic. Before V3, there is a series of two smooth deflections (V1r–V1ct) and one sharp peak (V2). After V3, a sharp negative (V4) wave and a smooth positive (V5) wave were observed in all specimens (Fig. 8A). However, compared with G. carapo, G sylvius shows larger EMF and synchrony.
The multiple air gap method shows that the two small and early components observed in the head to tail (V1r–V1ct) can be identified as independent because of their different origin along the body (Fig. 8B). As in G. carapo SU (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008), the negative component (V1r) starting the EOD waveform is generated abdominally and the positive component (V1ct) is generated at approximately the transition between the central and tail regions of the fish's body.
The central region of the EO consists of a dorsal row of very large doubly innervated electrocytes, explaining V2 (Fig. 8C,F), and three rows of small caudally innervated electrocytes on each side, explaining the complex V3-4-5. The caudal quarter has four similar rows of small caudally innervated electrocytes, which exhibit a smaller inter-electrocyte distance, explaining the larger peak amplitude of the measured complex V3-4-5. Consistently with the neurogenic hypothesis of V1ct, a large electromotor nerve is observed at the transition between the central and tail regions (Fig. 8D,E,G).
Gymnotus tigre
The head-to-tail waveform of this species recorded in air is pentaphasic, showing a negative V1r and a late positive V5 besides the main complex V2-3-4. The spatiotemporal pattern of EMF (Fig. 9A) shows that V1 is generated at the abdominal region, V2 at the central region and the complex V3-4 along the entire EO. At gaps 4, 5 and 6, a small V5 was observed in the two studied specimens. The EMF of all components increases in a rostro-caudal direction within their regional domains. As expected from this pattern, the central region of the EO consists of four rows of electrocytes with a dorsal row of doubly innervated electrocytes (Fig. 9B). At the tail region there are four rows of small and caudally innervated electrocytes (Fig. 9C).
Gymnotus varzea
We procured a single specimen of G. varzea for this study. The head-to-tail waveform of this species recorded in air is tetraphasic. In the air gap analysis of this single specimen, only six gaps were obtained (the activity of the most caudal gap was not recorded because the tip of the tail moved during the experiment). The spatio-temporal pattern of EMF (Fig. 10A) indicates that in this species' V1 is generated at the abdominal region, and the complex V2-3-4 is generated along the rest of the fish's body. In the last available gap, which in this specimen comprised the anterior portion of the tail, a biphasic pattern preceded by the activity of the posterior electromotor nerve was observed (Fig. 10A, arrow). Consistently with this pattern, at the abdominal and central regions, a dorsolateral row of electrocytes is doubly innervated, whereas at the tail only single-innervated electrocytes are observed.
DISCUSSION
Waveform diversity can be explained by a combination of five different anatomo-functional factors
We have studied 11 species belonging to two of the three main clades of the genus Gymnotus (Lovejoy et al., 2010). To facilitate the description and discussion of EOD diversity, we have grouped the known EOD patterns into four main anatomo-functional groups based on the combination of mechanisms as is described in Table 2.
Group I is represented by two species in our studies, G. coropinae and G. javari, both small species with a weak EOD that clearly exhibits two components in terms of frequency components and generation sites: (1) a sharp multiphasic component with a peak power at very high-frequency ranges generated at the central and caudal regions; and (2) a slower component with a power spectra peaking at lower frequencies generated by an expanded region of the EO that protrudes into the head under the cleithral aponeurotic sheath. The abdominal region contributes to both components.
The slow component generated mainly at the head extension of the EO can be described with the multiple air gap by two main deflections generated at the innervated faces of the electrocytes. The head negative deflection originates from rostrally innervated electrocytes and is represented in the near field by a source at the bi-opercular level. The head positive deflection is a peak preceding the caudally generated multiphasic component. This peak (which is broader and earlier than that generated at the central and caudal regions) is caused by the activation of the lateral faces of very large electrocytes. These electrocytes, which are oriented along the cleithrum, create sinks at both of the opercula, and a single source at the oral and perioral regions.
The sharp multiphasic component consists of a V2-3-4-5 sequence in which the origin of the different waves reflects the different innervation pattern of the EO. The sequence originating at the central region has its anatomical counterpart in the presence of a row of doubly innervated electrocytes on the same longitudinal domain. Rostral innervation of these doubly innervated electrocytes explains the head negative onset of this multiphasic discharge at the central region. Caudal innervations of the remaining electrocytes in this region explain the presence of the main positive component (V3). Likewise, the large auto-excitability of the EO explains the sharpness of V4 and the presence of V5. The contribution of the more caudal portion of the fish body, where only singly innervated electrocytes are present, consists of a V3-4-5 sequence. Neither in G. coropinae nor in G. javari was V4 load dependent, confirming that current flow along the EO in the absence of external load is enough to recruit synchronously the rostral phases of the electrocytes. This sharp and load-independent V4, as well as the back activation of some caudal faces at a short delay (V5), indicates the high auto-excitability of the electrocytes in situ.
Together, these data suggest that the cephalic expansion of the EO in G. javari is functionally equivalent to the cephalic expansion of the EO in G. coropinae (Castelló et al., 2009). This expansion may generate a short-range field component, which is particularly strong around the head, where the electroreceptive fovea occurs (Castelló et al., 2000). Because of the short range and the high resolution of the target electrosensory mosaic, we have shown in G. omarorum (Aguilera et al., 2001) and G. coropinae (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008; Castelló et al., 2009) that this rostral component of the EOD is likely to carry active electrolocation signals, while the higher voltage electric field generated by the central and tail regions of the body is likely to carry longer-range electrocommunication signals. In fact, concordant with the generality of this hypothesis, analyses of wave duration indicate that G. javari is an extreme example. The relatively long duration of head- and abdominal-generated components of the field, restricted to a small region surrounding the head and thus serving foveal electrolocation, contrast with the fast discharge of the rest of the fish body, reaching longer distances and thus serving communication. All this suggests that in this anatomo-functional group electrolocation and electrocommunication carriers are well separated in two different frequency bands.
Group II comprises species with tetraphasic or pentaphasic EODs generated from the abdominal region to the tip of the tail. This group includes G. curupira, G. n. sp. ‘itu’, G. omarorum, G. tigre and G. varzea. The EOD waveform always starts with a smooth negative component generated at the abdominal region (V1r) and is followed by the complex V2-3-4 with a characteristic peak-to-peak ratio and associated delays. In group II, interspecific variation in the head-to-tail recorded waveforms mainly depends on the extent to which the rostral face of the electrocytes is excitable (see above). The ability of action potentials to excite the rostral faces is not an all-or-nothing trait. Some species (G. curupira and G. n. sp. ‘itu’) having large auto-excitability show the largest and sharpest V4, and may also show a small late positive component (V5). At the other extreme, G. omarorum shows low auto-excitability, which generates a small V4. In between these extremes, the remaining species exhibit intermediate amounts of auto-excitability, with consequently intermediate V4 parameters. We should stress that EO auto-excitability is a phenotypically plastic character that is expected to vary over the course of an individual fish's life because of temperature, acclimation and sexual differentiation (Caputi et al., 1998). Nevertheless, the study of a large number of specimens of G. n. sp. ‘itu’ and G. omarorum captured from the Rio de La Plata basin throughout the year (in both the austral winter and summer, and during breeding and non-breeding seasons) indicated that the graded expression of V4-5 may be the only consistent species-specific difference in electrogeneration mechanisms (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009).
Group III is characterized by the presence of an early positive slow wave of neural origin at the head-to-tail electric field (V1ct) and a large auto-excitability of electrocytes – indicated by the sharpness and load independence of V4 and the presence of V5. This group includes G. sp. ‘carapo PE’, G. carapo SU and G. sylvius. V1ct could be explained by the presence of a large posterior electromotor nerve whose synchronic activation occurs at the same time as V1r. Three arguments favor this interpretation: (1) the coincident timing of V1ct with the activation timing of the nerve observed as a minor deflection in the caudal gap recordings in all species; (2) the coincidence of the location of the electric source of V1ct with the site where the nerve reaches its largest diameter; and (3) the resistance to curare in G. sylvius (A.A.C., P.A. and A.R.-C., unpublished).
The sharpness of V4 and the presence of V5 is generally associated with greater EO auto-excitability, as previously described (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). In fact, curarization abolishes V4 and V5 in all group III species tested, including G. sp. ‘carapo PE’, G. carapo SU and G. sylvius, indicating that these components are the consequence of the auto-excitatability of the EO. As expected for very excitable electrogenic tissue, V4 does not depend on load in species belonging to group III.
Group IV currently comprises a single species, G. obscurus [first discovered in the Brazilian Amazon (Crampton et al., 2005)], in which the EOD begins with the main positive wave (V3) and in which a preceding V2 phase is absent. In addition to exhibiting a quasi-monophasic EOD, the single specimen of G. obscurus available for study exhibited three distinctive features: (1) the late negative peak occurs at the tail region and its electromotive force is highly dependent of the amount of longitudinal current associated with V3. (2) In the EO sample taken from this species we did not see rostral innervations in any of the electrocytes observed. (3) According to Lovejoy et al. (Lovejoy et al., 2010), this type of EOD is derived from an ancestral multiphasic EOD state, implying loss of synapses on the rostral electrocyte faces, and a reduction of electrocyte excitability. Of the 37 species of Gymnotus described to date, only two other species, G. cylindricus and G. maculosus were known to generate a positive peak (V3) followed by a very low-amplitude negative component (Kirschbaum, 1995). Similarly to our results in G. obscurus, the anatomical study of a region of the EO in those specimens failed to show doubly innervated electrocytes (Kirschbaum, 1995). Nonetheless, confirming the absolute lack of doubly innervated electrocytes in the three species is required to affirm that G. cylindricus and G. maculosus belong to the same functional group as G. obscurus.
Phylogenetic distributions of the four functional groups
The two species that we assigned to functional group I, G. coropinae and G. javari, belong to the G1 clade of Lovejoy et al. (Lovejoy et al., 2010). Other members of this clade are also known to exhibit similar EODs with high peak power frequencies (typically >1.8 kHz). These species are also predicted to exhibit the same rostral extension of the EO, and auto-excitability at the caudal region. These characteristics are fundamentally different from other species of Gymnotus that we examined, and match the phylogenetic position of G1 species, as sister taxon to all remaining Gymnotus species in a deep evolutionary divergence.
All members of functional group II belong to the G. carapo clade of Lovejoy et al. (Lovejoy et al., 2010) (Lovejoy personal communication for G. omarorum and G. n. sp. ‘itu’). Likewise, all members of functional group III also belongs to the G. carapo species clade (Lovejoy et al., 2010) (N. R. Lovejoy, personal communication for G. sylvius and G. carapo SU), within a complex of species that are very closely related to G. carapo SU. The single member of functional group IV, G. obscurus, also belongs to the G. carapo clade of Lovejoy et al. (Lovejoy et al., 2010).
These patterns indicate that all species in the G1 clade of Lovejoy et al. (Lovejoy et al., 2010) share a common functional EOD pattern, that of group I. In contrast, there is a considerable diversity of waveform generation within the G. carapo clade, corresponding to functional groups II, III and IV. In most cases this diversity is the consequence of the presence or absence, or relative amplitude, of low-amplitude EOD components. Gymnotus obscurus, with its unusual group IV EOD pattern, is well nested within the G. carapo clade, indicating that radical modifications of EOD generation can evolve as a derived condition within this group (Lovejoy et al., 2010). Lovejoy et al.'s (Lovejoy et al., 2010) phylogeny also contains a third, ‘G2 clade’ comprising Gymnotus cataniapo, Gymnotus pedanopterus and Gymnotus cf. anguillaris. We do not yet have complete data sets for the EOD generation in any species belonging to the G2 clade, and this represents an important direction for future research.
The central EOD and the co-evolution of neural and peripheral mechanisms of electrogenesis
The central regions of the body of Gymnotus exhibit a pattern generated by the successive neural activation of rostral and caudal faces (V2–V3), and also by the subsequent activation of rostral faces by the action potentials arising in the caudal faces (V4). The intermediate values of EMF and internal resistance of the central region of the fish's body indicate that the waveform generated here contributes to the far-field waveform much more than waveforms generated in the rostral and caudal portions of the body (Caputi and Budelli, 1995). The interval V2–V3 is a neurally determined delay. We have so far confirmed this feature using partial curarization (Rodríguez-Cattáneo and Caputi, 2009). In contrast, the interval V3–V4 is only dependent on the electrocyte excitability, as V4 is generated by action potentials firing at the non-innervated faces when the action currents causing V3 depolarize them above the critical firing level. We have postulated that the co-evolution of neural and peripheral mechanisms is responsible for the timing of the main sequence V3-4-5 (Castelló et al., 2009). Here we confirmed this hypothesis by including an additional six multiphasic species. The delay V3–V4 (i.e. a peripherally determined sequence) follows an increasing function of the delay V2–V3 (a neurally determined sequence; Fig. 11). Interestingly, in this plot one can identify regions corresponding to the position of each group.
The matching of the timing of centrally and peripherally determined temporal organization of the EOD raises the question of how electroreceptor tuning matches the peak power frequency. Although extensive data are available on matching receptor tuning curves with local EODs (Bastian, 1976; Bastian, 1977; Watson and Bastian; 1979; Yager and Hopkins, 1993), matching across species is still lacking and should be addressed by future research.
In addition, one might speculate on the mechanisms needed to implement such a match. Changes of the V2–V3 interval require changes in the presynaptic timing of the electromotor fibers. This can be achieved by changes in channel repertoire, distance between Ranvier nodes and/or fiber thickness (determining conduction velocity) or fiber lengths. In contrast, changes in electrocyte responsiveness (V3–V4) are likely dependent on channel repertoire or electrocyte geometry. Parsimony may favor the hypothesis that a species-specific structural change of a membrane channel (or a group of channels) is the basis of this mechanism.
This matching of the timing of neurally and peripherally determined inter-component intervals is important for sharpening the peak power frequency of the ‘communication carrier’ characteristic of each species (Rodríguez-Cattáneo et al., 2008). The central region is the most important region expressed in the head-to-tail EOD waveform, as well as being the EOD waveform ‘seen’ by conspecifics, which suggests that the frequency range of the power spectra may be a major important EOD feature for conspecific recognition (Hopkins, 1976) or for predator avoidance (Stoddard, 1999). Nonetheless, Crampton et al. (Crampton et al., 2011) document cases of ecologically co-occurring species of Gymnotus that exhibit overlapping peak power spectral properties among mature adults, suggesting that species recognition may involve additional cues, such as the temporal properties of the head-to-tail EOD waveform (or parts of the waveform).
Conclusions
Present evidence from 11 species supports the notion that EOD waveform diversification in Gymnotus involves a combination of different anatomo-functional factors, which we summarize below in two categories: first, those that are cell-based, and second, those that act at the organismal level. In this study we identified the role of these factors in determining waveform diversity and identified four anatomo-functional groups (Table 2). The early divergence between species in the G1 clade and other Gymnotus lineages is supported by strong differences in EO organization, in which the presence of a rostral expansion of the EO is characteristic of species belonging to the G1 clade (sensu Lovejoy et al., 2010). Finally, the neural coordination mechanisms determining the wave timing are important for determining interspecific variation in the peak power frequency of the far-field signals, which would not be possible if the electrocyte responsiveness did not match the difference in neural volley delays. The strong correlation between the neutrally (V2–V3) and the myogenically (V3–V4) determined intervals among all species studied to date suggests a hitherto unseen co-evolution of neural and myogenic mechanisms, and supports the presence of a peak frequency in the power spectral density of the emitted signals.
Acknowledgements
We thank the following, whose collaboration made possible the Amazonian study: Dr. Hernan Ortega (Departamento de Ictiología, Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos) for graciously hosting this research expedition and organizing field permits; Euridice Honorio and Edwin Correa Verdi (Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonia Peruana for use of the Jenaro Herrera Research Center); Dr Jorge L. Marapara Del Águila and his collaborators (Universidad de la Amazonia Peruana, Iquitos, Perú) for graciously providing laboratory space and fundamental support for the electrophysiological recordings and extraction of the anatomical samples; Erika Vanessa Correa and Maria Isabel Aldea Guevara for coordinating and assisting with field research and logistics; Joseph Waddell, Jeffrey Lambert and John Stark from the University of Central Florida, and Edinson Emiliano Irarica Curinuqui, Rider Souza Chota, Nolortegui Parana Canelao, Edinson Irarica Huanaquiri and Hugo Irarica Huanaquiri for field and laboratory assistance; and Alejandra Pastorino for technical processing of histological samples. We thank N. Lovejoy for fruitful discussions.
FOOTNOTES
FUNDING
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation [grant DEB-0614334 to W.G.R.C. (PI) and J. Albert, N. Lovejoy and A.A.C. (co-PIs)]; the European Commission ICT-FET Proactive Initiative ‘Embodied Intelligence’ [project acronym: ANGELS; grant no. 231845]; the Agencia Nacional de Investigación e Innovación of Uruguay [FCE 655, SNB and SNI]; and PEDECIBA Uruguay.
LIST OF SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS
- EMF
electromotive force
- EO
electric organ
- EOD
electric organ discharge
- htEOD
head-to-tail EOD-associated electric field
- I
current
- t
time
- TL
total length
- V1ct
positive slow component with generator in central-tail regions of the fish
- V1r
first slow negative component with generator in rostral region of the fish
- V2
negative component just before V3
- V3
main positive component
- V4
negative component just after V3
- V5
positive component just after V3
REFERENCES
COMPETING INTERESTS
No competing interests declared.