| Literature DB >> 31112127 |
Shahar Frechter1, Alexander Shakeel Bates1, Sina Tootoonian1,2,3, Michael-John Dolan1,4, James Manton1, Arian Rokkum Jamasb5, Johannes Kohl1, Davi Bock4, Gregory Jefferis1,5.
Abstract
Most sensory systems are organized into parallel neuronal pathways that process distinct aspects of incoming stimuli. In the insect olfactory system, second order projection neurons target both the mushroom body, required for learning, and the lateral horn (LH), proposed to mediate innate olfactory behavior. Mushroom body neurons form a sparse olfactory population code, which is not stereotyped across animals. In contrast, odor coding in the LH remains poorly understood. We combine genetic driver lines, anatomical and functional criteria to show that the Drosophila LH has ~1400 neurons and >165 cell types. Genetically labeled LHNs have stereotyped odor responses across animals and on average respond to three times more odors than single projection neurons. LHNs are better odor categorizers than projection neurons, likely due to stereotyped pooling of related inputs. Our results reveal some of the principles by which a higher processing area can extract innate behavioral significance from sensory stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: D. melanogaster; Drosophila; cell type; lateral Horn; neuroanatomy; neuroscience; olfaction
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31112127 PMCID: PMC6550879 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.44590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140