Department of Biology, University of Washington, 24 Kincaid Hall, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Division of Biology and Bioengineering, California Institute of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91125, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Apr 24;27(8):1200-1205. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.03.004. Epub 2017 Apr 6.
To navigate through the world, animals must stabilize their path against disturbances and change direction to avoid obstacles and to search for resources [1, 2]. Locomotion is thus guided by sensory cues but also depends on intrinsic processes, such as motivation and physiological state. Flies, for example, turn with the direction of large-field rotatory motion, an optomotor reflex that is thought to help them fly straight [3-5]. Occasionally, however, they execute fast turns, called body saccades, either spontaneously or in response to patterns of visual motion such as expansion [6-8]. These turns can be measured in tethered flying Drosophila [3, 4, 9], which facilitates the study of underlying neural mechanisms. Whereas there is evidence for an efference copy input to visual interneurons during saccades [10], the circuits that control spontaneous and visually elicited saccades are not well known. Using two-photon calcium imaging and electrophysiological recordings in tethered flying Drosophila, we have identified a descending neuron whose activity is correlated with both spontaneous and visually elicited turns during tethered flight. The cell's activity in open- and closed-loop experiments suggests that it does not underlie slower compensatory responses to horizontal motion but rather controls rapid changes in flight path. The activity of this neuron can explain some of the behavioral variability observed in response to visual motion and appears sufficient for eliciting turns when artificially activated. This work provides an entry point into studying the circuits underlying the control of rapid steering maneuvers in the fly brain.
为了在世界中导航,动物必须稳定它们的路径以抵抗干扰,并改变方向以避免障碍物和寻找资源[1,2]。因此,运动是由感觉线索引导的,但也依赖于内在过程,如动机和生理状态。例如,苍蝇会根据大视野旋转运动的方向转弯,这是一种光感受反射,被认为有助于它们直线飞行[3-5]。然而,它们偶尔会执行快速转弯,称为身体扫视,无论是自发的还是对视觉运动模式(如扩展)的反应[6-8]。在拴系飞行的果蝇中可以测量这些转弯[3,4,9],这有助于研究潜在的神经机制。虽然有证据表明在扫视期间视觉中间神经元有传出副本输入[10],但控制自发和视觉诱发扫视的回路尚不清楚。使用双光子钙成像和拴系飞行果蝇中的电生理记录,我们鉴定了一种下行神经元,其活性与拴系飞行期间的自发和视觉诱发转弯相关。该细胞在开环和闭环实验中的活性表明,它不是引起对水平运动的较慢补偿反应的基础,而是控制飞行路径的快速变化。该神经元的活性可以解释在响应视觉运动时观察到的一些行为变异性,并且当人工激活时似乎足以引起转弯。这项工作为研究苍蝇大脑中快速转向机动控制的电路提供了一个切入点。