Stereotyped Odor-Evoked Activity in the Mushroom Body of Drosophila Revealed by Green Fluorescent Protein-Based Ca super(2+) Imaging

To study the representation of olfactory information in higher brain centers, we expressed a green fluorescent protein-based Ca super(2+) sensor, G-CaMP, in the Drosophila mushroom body (MB). Using two-photon microscopy, we imaged odor-evoked G-CaMP fluorescence transients in MB neurons [Kenyon cell...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2004-07, Vol.24 (29), p.6507-6514
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yalin, Guo, Hui-Fu, Pologruto, Thomas A, Hannan, Frances, Hakker, Inessa, Svoboda, Karel, Zhong, Yi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To study the representation of olfactory information in higher brain centers, we expressed a green fluorescent protein-based Ca super(2+) sensor, G-CaMP, in the Drosophila mushroom body (MB). Using two-photon microscopy, we imaged odor-evoked G-CaMP fluorescence transients in MB neurons [Kenyon cells (KCs)] with single-cell resolution. Odors produced large fluorescence transients in a subset of KC somata and in restricted regions of the calyx, the neuropil of the MB. In different KCs, odor-evoked fluorescence transients showed diverse changes with odor concentration: in some KCs, fluorescence transients were evoked by an odor at concentrations spanning several orders of magnitude, whereas in others only at a narrow concentration range. Different odors produced fluorescence transients in different subsets of KCs. The spatial distributions of KCs showing fluorescence transients evoked by a given odor were similar across individuals. For some odors, individual KCs with fluorescence transients evoked by a particular odor could be found in similar locations in different flies with spatial precisions on the order of the size of KC somata. These results indicate that odor-evoked activity can have remarkable spatial specificity in the MB.
ISSN:0270-6474