首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Cell types and coincident synapses in the ellipsoid body of Drosophila
Authors:Alfonso Martín‐Peña  Angel Acebes  José‐Rodrigo Rodríguez  Valerie Chevalier  Sergio Casas‐Tinto  Tilman Triphan  Roland Strauss  Alberto Ferrús
Affiliation:1. Department of Cellular, Molecular and Developmental Neurobiology, Cajal Institute, C.S.I.C., , E‐28002 Madrid, Spain;2. Department of Neurology, McKnight Brain Institute, College of Medicine, University of Florida, , Gainesville, FL, USA;3. Center for Biomedical Research of the Canary Islands, Institute of Biomedical Technologies, University of La Laguna, , Tenerife, Spain;4. Biozentrum der Universitaet Wuerzburg, Lehrstuhl für Genetik und Neurobiologie, , Wuerzburg, Germany;5. HHMI Janelia Farm Research Campus, , Ashburn, VA, USA;6. Department of Zoologie III–Neurobiologie, Johannes Gutenberg‐Universitaet Mainz, , Mainz, Germany
Abstract:
Cellular ultrastructures for signal integration are unknown in any nervous system. The ellipsoid body (EB) of the Drosophila brain is thought to control locomotion upon integration of various modalities of sensory signals with the animal internal status. However, the expected excitatory and inhibitory input convergence that virtually all brain centres exhibit is not yet described in the EB. Based on the EB expression domains of genetic constructs from the choline acetyl transferase (Cha), glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) genes, we identified a new set of neurons with the characteristic ring‐shaped morphology (R neurons) which are presumably cholinergic, in addition to the existing GABA‐expressing neurons. The R1 morphological subtype is represented in the Cha‐ and TH‐expressing classes. In addition, using transmission electron microscopy, we identified a novel type of synapse in the EB, which exhibits the precise array of two independent active zones over the same postsynaptic dendritic domain, that we named ‘agora’. This array is compatible with a coincidence detector role, and represents ~8% of all EB synapses in Drosophila. Presumably excitatory R neurons contribute to coincident synapses. Functional silencing of EB neurons by driving genetically tetanus toxin expression either reduces walking speed or alters movement orientation depending on the targeted R neuron subset, thus revealing functional specialisations in the EB for locomotion control.
Keywords:central complex  coincidence detectors  development  locomotion control
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号