The Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia
School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
J Neurosci. 2020 May 20;40(21):4130-4144. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0049-20.2020. Epub 2020 Apr 10.
Information about water flow, detected by lateral line organs, is critical to the behavior and survival of fish and amphibians. While certain aspects of water flow processing have been revealed through electrophysiology, we lack a comprehensive description of the neurons that respond to water flow and the network that they form. Here, we use brain-wide calcium imaging in combination with microfluidic stimulation to map out, at cellular resolution, neuronal responses involved in perceiving and processing water flow information in larval zebrafish. We find a diverse array of neurons responding to head-to-tail (h-t) flow, tail-to-head (t-h) flow, or both. Early in this pathway, in the lateral line ganglia, neurons respond almost exclusively to the simple presence of h-t or t-h flow, but later processing includes neurons responding specifically to flow onset, representing the accumulated displacement of flow during a stimulus, or encoding the speed of the flow. The neurons reporting on these more nuanced details are located across numerous brain regions, including some not previously implicated in water flow processing. A graph theory-based analysis of the brain-wide water flow network shows that a majority of this processing is dedicated to h-t flow detection, and this is reinforced by our finding that details like flow velocity and the total accumulated flow are only encoded for the h-t direction. The results represent the first brain-wide description of processing for this important modality, and provide a departure point for more detailed studies of the flow of information through this network. In aquatic animals, the lateral line is important for detecting water flow stimuli, but the brain networks that interpret this information remain mysterious. Here, we have imaged the activity of individual neurons across the entire brains of larval zebrafish, revealing all response types and their brain locations as water flow processing occurs. We find neurons that respond to the simple presence of water flow, and others attuned to the direction, speed, and duration of flow, or the accumulated displacement of water that has passed during the stimulus. With this information, we modeled the underlying network, describing a system that is nuanced in its processing of water flow simulating head-to-tail motion but rudimentary in processing flow in the tail-to-head direction.
有关侧线器官检测到的水流信息对于鱼类和两栖类动物的行为和生存至关重要。虽然通过电生理学已经揭示了水流处理的某些方面,但我们缺乏对响应水流的神经元以及它们形成的网络的全面描述。在这里,我们使用全脑钙成像结合微流控刺激,以细胞分辨率绘制出幼虫斑马鱼感知和处理水流信息所涉及的神经元反应,以及它们形成的网络。我们发现了各种各样的神经元对头尾(h-t)流、尾到头(t-h)流或两者都有反应。在这个通路的早期,在侧线神经节中,神经元几乎只对 h-t 或 t-h 流的简单存在做出反应,但后来的处理包括对流动起始、代表刺激期间流动累积位移或编码流动速度做出反应的神经元。报告这些更细微细节的神经元位于许多大脑区域,包括以前没有涉及水流处理的区域。基于图论的全脑水流网络分析表明,大部分处理都专门用于 h-t 流检测,我们发现,像流速和总累积流量这样的细节仅用于 h-t 方向。这些结果代表了对这一重要模态进行的首次全脑描述,并为更详细地研究通过该网络的信息流提供了一个起点。在水生动物中,侧线对于检测水流刺激很重要,但解释这些信息的大脑网络仍然是个谜。在这里,我们对幼虫斑马鱼整个大脑中的单个神经元活动进行了成像,揭示了水流处理过程中所有反应类型及其大脑位置。我们发现了对水流简单存在有反应的神经元,以及对水流方向、速度和持续时间或在刺激期间通过的水流累积位移有反应的神经元。有了这些信息,我们对基础网络进行了建模,描述了一个在处理模拟头尾运动的水流方面很精细,但在处理尾到头方向的水流方面很基础的系统。