White Benjamin H
a Laboratory of Molecular Biology , National Institute of Mental Health, NIH , Bethesda , MD , USA.
J Neurogenet. 2016 Jun;30(2):54-61. doi: 10.1080/01677063.2016.1177049.
The past decade has witnessed the development of powerful, genetically encoded tools for manipulating and monitoring neuronal function in freely moving animals. These tools are most readily deployed in genetic model organisms and efforts to map the circuits that govern behavior have increasingly focused on worms, flies, zebrafish, and mice. The traditional virtues of these animals for genetic studies in terms of small size, short generation times, and ease of animal husbandry in a laboratory setting have facilitated rapid progress, and the neural basis of an increasing number of behaviors is being established at cellular resolution in each of these animals. The depth and breadth of this analysis should soon offer a significantly more comprehensive understanding of how the circuitry underlying behavior is organized in particular animals and promises to help answer long-standing questions that have waited for such a brain-wide perspective on nervous system function. The comprehensive understanding achieved in genetic model animals is thus likely to make them into paradigmatic examples that will serve as touchstones for comparisons to understand how behavior is organized in other animals, including ourselves.
在过去十年中,已经出现了功能强大的、基于基因编码的工具,用于在自由活动的动物中操纵和监测神经元功能。这些工具最容易应用于遗传模式生物,并且绘制控制行为的神经回路的工作越来越集中在蠕虫、果蝇、斑马鱼和小鼠上。这些动物在遗传研究方面具有传统优势,如体型小、世代周期短以及在实验室环境中易于饲养,这些优势推动了快速进展,并且在这些动物中的每一种中,越来越多行为的神经基础正在细胞分辨率水平上得以确立。这种分析的深度和广度很快将为特定动物中行为背后的神经回路是如何组织的提供显著更全面的理解,并有望帮助解答长期以来等待这种全脑视角的神经系统功能的问题。因此,在遗传模式动物中实现的全面理解很可能使它们成为范例,作为比较的试金石,以了解包括我们人类在内的其他动物的行为是如何组织的。