Varga Adrienn G, Kathman Nicholas D, Martin Joshua P, Guo Peiyuan, Ritzmann Roy E
Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH, USA.
Department of Biology, Colby College Waterville, ME, USA.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2017 Jan 24;11:4. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00004. eCollection 2017.
Cockroaches are scavengers that forage through dark, maze-like environments. Like other foraging animals, for instance rats, they must continually asses their situation to keep track of targets and negotiate barriers. While navigating a complex environment, all animals need to integrate sensory information in order to produce appropriate motor commands. The integrated sensory cues can be used to provide the animal with an environmental and contextual reference frame for the behavior. To successfully reach a goal location, navigational cues continuously derived from sensory inputs have to be utilized in the spatial guidance of motor commands. The sensory processes, contextual and spatial mechanisms, and motor outputs contributing to navigation have been heavily studied in rats. In contrast, many insect studies focused on the sensory and/or motor components of navigation, and our knowledge of the abstract representation of environmental context and spatial information in the insect brain is relatively limited. Recent reports from several laboratories have explored the role of the central complex (CX), a sensorimotor region of the insect brain, in navigational processes by recording the activity of CX neurons in freely-moving insects and in more constrained, experimenter-controlled situations. The results of these studies indicate that the CX participates in processing the temporal and spatial components of sensory cues, and utilizes these cues in creating an internal representation of orientation and context, while also directing motor control. Although these studies led to a better understanding of the CX's role in insect navigation, there are still major voids in the literature regarding the underlying mechanisms and brain regions involved in spatial navigation. The main goal of this review is to place the above listed findings in the wider context of animal navigation by providing an overview of the neural mechanisms of navigation in rats and summarizing and comparing our current knowledge on the CX's role in insect navigation to these processes. By doing so, we aimed to highlight some of the missing puzzle pieces in insect navigation and provide a different perspective for future directions.
蟑螂是在黑暗、迷宫般的环境中觅食的食腐动物。与其他觅食动物一样,例如老鼠,它们必须不断评估自身状况,以追踪目标并绕过障碍物。在复杂环境中导航时,所有动物都需要整合感官信息,以便产生适当的运动指令。整合后的感官线索可用于为动物的行为提供一个环境和情境参考框架。为了成功到达目标位置,在运动指令的空间引导中必须持续利用从感官输入中获取的导航线索。在老鼠身上,对有助于导航的感官过程、情境和空间机制以及运动输出进行了大量研究。相比之下,许多昆虫研究集中在导航的感官和/或运动组件上,而我们对昆虫大脑中环境情境和空间信息的抽象表征的了解相对有限。几个实验室最近的报告通过记录自由活动昆虫以及在更受限制、由实验者控制的情况下中央复合体(CX)神经元的活动,探讨了昆虫大脑的感觉运动区域中央复合体在导航过程中的作用。这些研究结果表明,中央复合体参与处理感官线索的时间和空间成分,并利用这些线索创建方向和情境的内部表征,同时还指导运动控制。尽管这些研究使我们对中央复合体在昆虫导航中的作用有了更好的理解,但关于空间导航所涉及的潜在机制和脑区,文献中仍存在重大空白。本综述的主要目标是通过概述老鼠导航的神经机制,并将我们目前关于中央复合体在昆虫导航中作用的知识与这些过程进行总结和比较,将上述研究结果置于动物导航的更广泛背景中。通过这样做,我们旨在突出昆虫导航中一些缺失的拼图碎片,并为未来的研究方向提供不同的视角。