Command and compensation in a neuromodulatory decision network.

Autor: Luan H; Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA., Diao F, Peabody NC, White BH
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience [J Neurosci] 2012 Jan 18; Vol. 32 (3), pp. 880-9.
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3707-11.2012
Abstrakt: The neural circuits that mediate behavioral choices must not only weigh internal demands and environmental circumstances, but also select and implement specific actions, including associated visceral or neuroendocrine functions. Coordinating these multiple processes suggests considerable complexity. As a consequence, even circuits that support simple behavioral decisions remain poorly understood. Here we show that the environmentally sensitive wing expansion decision of adult fruit flies is coordinated by a single pair of neuromodulatory neurons with command-like function. Targeted suppression of these neurons using the Split Gal4 system abrogates the fly's ability to expand its wings in the face of environmental challenges, while stimulating them forces expansion by coordinately activating both motor and neuroendocrine outputs. The arbitration and implementation of the wing expansion decision by this neuronal pair may illustrate a general strategy by which neuromodulatory neurons orchestrate behavior. Interestingly, the decision network exhibits a plasticity that is unmasked under conducive environmental conditions in flies lacking the function of the command-like neuromodulatory neurons. Such flies can often expand their wings using a motor program distinct from that of wild-type animals and controls. This compensatory program may be the vestige of an ancestral, environmentally insensitive program used for wing expansion that existed before the evolution of the environmentally adaptive program currently used by Drosophila and other cyclorrhaphan flies.
Databáze: MEDLINE