Bockhorst Tobias, Homberg Uwe
Animal Physiology, Department of Biology, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany.
Animal Physiology, Department of Biology, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Jul 1;118(1):496-506. doi: 10.1152/jn.00927.2016. Epub 2017 Apr 12.
Goal-directed behavior is often complicated by unpredictable events, such as the appearance of a predator during directed locomotion. This situation requires adaptive responses like evasive maneuvers followed by subsequent reorientation and course correction. Here we study the possible neural underpinnings of such a situation in an insect, the desert locust. As in other insects, its sense of spatial orientation strongly relies on the central complex, a group of midline brain neuropils. The central complex houses sky compass cells that signal the polarization plane of skylight and thus indicate the animal's steering direction relative to the sun. Most of these cells additionally respond to small moving objects that drive fast sensory-motor circuits for escape. Here we investigate how the presentation of a moving object influences activity of the neurons during compass signaling. Cells responded in one of two ways: in some neurons, responses to the moving object were simply added to the compass response that had adapted during continuous stimulation by stationary polarized light. By contrast, other neurons disadapted, i.e., regained their full compass response to polarized light, when a moving object was presented. We propose that the latter case could help to prepare for reorientation of the animal after escape. A neuronal network based on central-complex architecture can explain both responses by slight changes in the dynamics and amplitudes of adaptation to polarized light in CL columnar input neurons of the system. Neurons of the central complex in several insects signal compass directions through sensitivity to the sky polarization pattern. In locusts, these neurons also respond to moving objects. We show here that during polarized-light presentation, responses to moving objects override their compass signaling or restore adapted inhibitory as well as excitatory compass responses. A network model is presented to explain the variations of these responses that likely serve to redirect flight or walking following evasive maneuvers.
目标导向行为常常因不可预测的事件而变得复杂,比如在定向移动过程中捕食者的出现。这种情况需要适应性反应,如躲避动作,随后进行重新定向和路线校正。在这里,我们研究昆虫沙漠蝗虫在这种情况下可能的神经基础。与其他昆虫一样,其空间定向感强烈依赖于中央复合体,这是一组位于脑中线的神经纤维网。中央复合体包含天空罗盘细胞,这些细胞能发出天空光偏振面的信号,从而指示动物相对于太阳的转向方向。这些细胞中的大多数还对小的移动物体做出反应,这些物体驱动快速的感觉运动回路以实现逃避。在这里,我们研究移动物体的呈现如何影响罗盘信号传递过程中神经元的活动。细胞以两种方式之一做出反应:在一些神经元中,对移动物体的反应简单地叠加到在静止偏振光持续刺激下已经适应的罗盘反应上。相比之下,当呈现移动物体时,其他神经元会去适应,即恢复它们对偏振光的完整罗盘反应。我们提出,后一种情况可能有助于动物在逃避后为重新定向做好准备。基于中央复合体结构的神经网络可以通过系统CL柱状输入神经元对偏振光适应的动力学和幅度的轻微变化来解释这两种反应。几种昆虫的中央复合体中的神经元通过对天空偏振模式的敏感性来信号指示罗盘方向。在蝗虫中,这些神经元也对移动物体做出反应。我们在这里表明,在偏振光呈现期间,对移动物体的反应会覆盖它们的罗盘信号传递,或者恢复已适应的抑制性以及兴奋性罗盘反应。我们提出了一个网络模型来解释这些反应的变化,这些变化可能有助于在躲避动作后重新引导飞行或行走。