Ngo Kathy T, Andrade Ingrid, Hartenstein Volker
Department of Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, United States.
Department of Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, United States; Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Dev Biol. 2017 Aug 1;428(1):1-24. doi: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2017.05.008. Epub 2017 May 19.
Visual information processing in animals with large image forming eyes is carried out in highly structured retinotopically ordered neuropils. Visual neuropils in Drosophila form the optic lobe, which consists of four serially arranged major subdivisions; the lamina, medulla, lobula and lobula plate; the latter three of these are further subdivided into multiple layers. The visual neuropils are formed by more than 100 different cell types, distributed and interconnected in an invariant highly regular pattern. This pattern relies on a protracted sequence of developmental steps, whereby different cell types are born at specific time points and nerve connections are formed in a tightly controlled sequence that has to be coordinated among the different visual neuropils. The developing fly visual system has become a highly regarded and widely studied paradigm to investigate the genetic mechanisms that control the formation of neural circuits. However, these studies are often made difficult by the complex and shifting patterns in which different types of neurons and their connections are distributed throughout development. In the present paper we have reconstructed the three-dimensional architecture of the Drosophila optic lobe from the early larva to the adult. Based on specific markers, we were able to distinguish the populations of progenitors of the four optic neuropils and map the neurons and their connections. Our paper presents sets of annotated confocal z-projections and animated 3D digital models of these structures for representative stages. The data reveal the temporally coordinated growth of the optic neuropils, and clarify how the position and orientation of the neuropils and interconnecting tracts (inner and outer optic chiasm) changes over time. Finally, we have analyzed the emergence of the discrete layers of the medulla and lobula complex using the same markers (DN-cadherin, Brp) employed to systematically explore the structure and development of the central brain neuropil. Our work will facilitate experimental studies of the molecular mechanisms regulating neuronal fate and connectivity in the fly visual system, which bears many fundamental similarities with the retina of vertebrates.
具有大型成像眼睛的动物的视觉信息处理是在高度结构化的视网膜拓扑有序神经纤维网中进行的。果蝇的视觉神经纤维网形成视叶,视叶由四个依次排列的主要亚部分组成:层、髓质、小叶和小叶板;其中后三个又进一步细分为多层。视觉神经纤维网由100多种不同的细胞类型组成,它们以不变的高度规则模式分布并相互连接。这种模式依赖于一系列漫长的发育步骤,不同的细胞类型在特定时间点产生,神经连接以严格控制的顺序形成,且必须在不同的视觉神经纤维网之间进行协调。发育中的果蝇视觉系统已成为研究控制神经回路形成的遗传机制的备受关注且广泛研究的范例。然而,这些研究常常因不同类型神经元及其连接在整个发育过程中分布的复杂且不断变化的模式而变得困难。在本文中,我们重建了从早期幼虫到成虫的果蝇视叶的三维结构。基于特定标记,我们能够区分四个视神经纤维网的祖细胞群体,并绘制神经元及其连接图。我们的论文展示了这些结构在代表性阶段的带注释的共聚焦z投影集和动画3D数字模型。数据揭示了视神经纤维网在时间上的协调生长,并阐明了神经纤维网和互连束(内、外视交叉)的位置和方向如何随时间变化。最后,我们使用用于系统探索中枢脑神经网络结构和发育的相同标记(DN-钙黏蛋白、Brp)分析了髓质和小叶复合体离散层的出现。我们的工作将有助于对调节果蝇视觉系统中神经元命运和连接性的分子机制进行实验研究,果蝇视觉系统与脊椎动物的视网膜有许多基本相似之处。