Fachbereich Biologie, Tierphysiologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Marburg D-35032, Germany.
J Neurophysiol. 2012 Sep;108(6):1695-710. doi: 10.1152/jn.01023.2011. Epub 2012 Jul 5.
Many migrating insects rely on the plane of sky polarization as a cue to detect spatial directions. Desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria), like other insects, perceive polarized light through specialized photoreceptors in a dorsal eye region. Desert locusts occur in two phases: a gregarious swarming phase, which migrates during the day, and a solitarious nocturnal phase. Neurons in a small brain area, the anterior optic tubercle (AOTu), are critically involved in processing polarized light in the locust brain. While polarization-sensitive intertubercle cells [lobula-tubercle neuron 1 (LoTu1) and tubercle-tubercle neuron 1 (TuTu1)] interconnect the AOTu of both hemispheres, tubercle-lateral accessory lobe tract (TuLAL1) neurons transmit sky compass signals to a polarization compass in the central brain. To better understand the neural network underlying polarized light processing in the AOTu and to investigate possible adaptations of the polarization vision system to a diurnal versus nocturnal lifestyle, we analyzed receptive field properties, intensity-response relationships, and daytime dependence of responses of AOTu neurons in gregarious and solitarious locusts. Surprisingly, no differences in the physiology of these neurons were found between the two locust phases. Instead, clear differences were observed between the different types of AOTu neurons. Whereas TuTu1 and TuLAL1 neurons encoded E-vector orientation independent of light intensity and would thus be operational in bright daylight, LoTu1 neurons were inhibited by high light intensity and provided strong polarization signaling only under dim light conditions. The presence of high- and low-intensity polarization channels might, therefore, allow solitarious and gregarious locusts to use the same polarization coding system despite their different activity cycles.
许多迁徙昆虫依赖天空偏振面作为检测空间方向的线索。沙漠蝗(Schistocerca gregaria)与其他昆虫一样,通过背部眼部区域的特殊光感受器感知偏振光。沙漠蝗有两种形态:群居的迁徙形态,在白天迁徙,以及独居的夜间形态。小脑中的一个特定区域,前视神经节(AOTu)中的神经元在处理蝗虫大脑中的偏振光方面起着关键作用。虽然偏振敏感的神经节间细胞[外侧腿节神经元 1(LoTu1)和腿节-腿节神经元 1(TuTu1)]在两个半球的 AOTu 之间相互连接,但腿节-外侧附加叶束(TuLAL1)神经元将天空罗盘信号传递到中央脑中的偏振罗盘。为了更好地理解 AOTu 中偏振光处理的神经网络,并研究偏振视觉系统可能适应昼夜生活方式的方式,我们分析了群居和独居蝗虫 AOTu 神经元的感受野特性、强度反应关系以及白天对反应的依赖性。令人惊讶的是,在这两种蝗虫形态之间,这些神经元的生理学没有差异。相反,在不同类型的 AOTu 神经元之间观察到明显的差异。虽然 TuTu1 和 TuLAL1 神经元独立于光强度编码 E-矢量方向,因此在强光下仍能工作,但 LoTu1 神经元被强光抑制,只有在弱光条件下才会产生强烈的偏振信号。因此,高和低强度偏振通道的存在可能允许独居和群居蝗虫使用相同的偏振编码系统,尽管它们的活动周期不同。