Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Center for Brain Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Neuron. 2010 Dec 22;68(6):1173-86. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2010.11.025.
Many animals use their olfactory systems to learn to avoid dangers, but how neural circuits encode naive and learned olfactory preferences, and switch between those preferences, is poorly understood. Here, we map an olfactory network, from sensory input to motor output, which regulates the learned olfactory aversion of Caenorhabditis elegans for the smell of pathogenic bacteria. Naive animals prefer smells of pathogens but animals trained with pathogens lose this attraction. We find that two different neural circuits subserve these preferences, with one required for the naive preference and the other specifically for the learned preference. Calcium imaging and behavioral analysis reveal that the naive preference reflects the direct transduction of the activity of olfactory sensory neurons into motor response, whereas the learned preference involves modulations to signal transduction to downstream neurons to alter motor response. Thus, two different neural circuits regulate a behavioral switch between naive and learned olfactory preferences.
许多动物利用嗅觉系统来学习避开危险,但神经回路如何编码幼稚和习得的嗅觉偏好,并在这些偏好之间切换,这一点还知之甚少。在这里,我们绘制了一个从感觉输入到运动输出的嗅觉网络,该网络调节秀丽隐杆线虫对致病性细菌气味的习得性厌恶。幼稚的动物更喜欢病原体的气味,但经过病原体训练的动物会失去这种吸引力。我们发现,有两个不同的神经回路来调节这些偏好,一个回路负责幼稚偏好,另一个回路则专门负责习得偏好。钙成像和行为分析表明,幼稚偏好反映了嗅觉感觉神经元活性的直接转导到运动反应,而习得偏好则涉及到对下游神经元的信号转导进行调制,以改变运动反应。因此,两个不同的神经回路调节了幼稚和习得嗅觉偏好之间的行为转换。