The anterior paired lateral neuron normalizes odour-evoked activity in the Drosophila mushroom body calyx

2021 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​The anterior paired lateral neuron normalizes odour-evoked activity in the Drosophila mushroom body calyx​
Prisco, L.; Deimel, S. H.; Yeliseyeva, H.; Fiala, A.   & Tavosanis, G. ​ (2021) 
eLife10.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.74172 

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Authors
Prisco, Luigi; Deimel, Stephan Hubertus; Yeliseyeva, Hanna; Fiala, André ; Tavosanis, Gaia 
Abstract
To identify and memorize discrete but similar environmental inputs, the brain needs to distinguish between subtle differences of activity patterns in defined neuronal populations. The Kenyon cells (KCs) of the Drosophila adult mushroom body (MB) respond sparsely to complex olfactory input, a property that is thought to support stimuli discrimination in the MB. To understand how this property emerges, we investigated the role of the inhibitory anterior paired lateral (APL) neuron in the input circuit of the MB, the calyx. Within the calyx, presynaptic boutons of projection neurons (PNs) form large synaptic microglomeruli (MGs) with dendrites of postsynaptic KCs. Combining electron microscopy (EM) data analysis and in vivo calcium imaging, we show that APL, via inhibitory and reciprocal synapses targeting both PN boutons and KC dendrites, normalizes odour-evoked representations in MGs of the calyx. APL response scales with the PN input strength and is regionalized around PN input distribution. Our data indicate that the formation of a sparse code by the KCs requires APL-driven normalization of their MG postsynaptic responses. This work provides experimental insights on how inhibition shapes sensory information representation in a higher brain centre, thereby supporting stimuli discrimination and allowing for efficient associative memory formation.
Issue Date
2021
Journal
eLife 
Project
FOR 2705: Dissection of a Brain Circuit: Structure, Plasticity and Behavioral Function of the Drosophila Mushroom Body 
FOR 2705 | TP 6: The role of gap junctions during mushroom body development and remodeling 
Working Group
RG Fiala 
RG Tavosanis (Developmental Neurobiology) 
eISSN
2050-084X
Language
English

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