Neha Sapkal does research to understand
the neural code of stopping in the fly. Credit: Kevin Albertini, Max Planck
Florida Institute for Neuroscience
Ever wish you could stop that fruit
fly on your kitchen counter in its tracks? Scientists at Max Planck Florida
Institute for Neuroscience have created flies that halt under red light. In
doing so, they discovered the precise neural mechanisms involved in stopping.
Their findings, published in Nature, have implications far beyond controlling fly
behavior. They demonstrate how the brain engages different neural mechanisms
depending on environmental context.
The power of Drosophila to understand complex behaviors
Halting is a critical action essential for almost all animal behaviors. When foraging, an animal must stop when it detects food to eat; when dirty, it must stop to groom itself. The ability to stop, while seemingly simple, has not been well understood as it involves complex interactions with competing behaviors like walking.
Research from Max Planck Florida Institute for
Neuroscience, led by Dr. Salil Bidaye, identified three neurons in flies that
control stopping. When the scientists shined red light to activate these
neurons (red circle), they caused the flies to stop forward walking, each in a
different way. Bluebell—BB and Foxglove—FG neurons inhibited turning and
forward walking, respectively, while Brake—BRK neurons overrode all walking
commands and enhanced leg-joint resistance. Credit: Bidaye Lab, Max Planck
Florida Institute for Neuroscience
Max Planck Florida scientist Dr.
Salil Bidaye is an expert at using the powerful research model Drosophila
Melanogaster (aka the fruit fly) to understand how neural circuit activity
leads to precise and complex behaviors such as navigating through an environment.
Having previously identified neurons critical for forward, backward, and turning
locomotion, Dr. Bidaye and his team turned to stopping.
"Purposeful movement through
the world relies on halting at the correct time as much as walking. It is
central to important behaviors like eating, mating, and avoiding harm. We were
interested in understanding how the brain controls halting and where halting
signals override signals for walking," said Bidaye.
Taking advantage of the fruit fly's
power as a research model, including the animal's simplified nervous system,
short lifespan, and large offspring numbers, Bidaye and his team used a genetic
screen to identify neurons that initiate stopping. Using optogenetics to
activate specific neurons by shining a red light, the researchers turned on
small groups of neurons to see which caused freely walking flies to stop.
Two mechanisms for stopping
Three unique neuron types, named
Foxglove, Bluebell, and Brake, caused the flies to stop when activated. Through
careful and precise analysis, the scientists determined that the flies'
stopping mechanisms differed depending on which neuron was active. Foxglove and
Bluebell neurons inhibited forward walking and turning, respectively, while
Brake neurons overrode all walking commands and enhanced leg-joint resistance.
"Our research team's diverse
expertise was critical in analyzing precise stopping mechanisms. Each team
member contributed to our understanding by approaching the question through
different methods, including leg movement analysis, imaging of neural activity,
and computational modeling," said Bidaye.
"Further, large research
collaborations spanning multiple labs and countries have recently mapped the
connections between all the neurons in the fly brain and nerve cord. These
wiring diagrams guided our experiments and understanding of the neural circuitry
and mechanisms of halting."
The research team, consisting of
scientists from Max Planck Florida, Florida Atlantic University, University of
Cambridge, University of California, Berkeley and the MRC Laboratory of
Molecular Biology, combined the data from the wiring diagrams and these
multiple approaches to gain a holistic understanding of the behavioral,
muscular, and neuronal mechanisms that induced the fly's halting.
They found that activating these
different neurons did not stop the flies in the same way but used unique
mechanisms, which they named "Walk-OFF" and "Brake."
As the name implies, the
"Walk-OFF" mechanism works by turning off neurons that drive walking,
similar to removing your foot from the gas pedal of a car. This mechanism, used
by the Foxglove and Bluebell neurons, relies on the inhibitory neurotransmitter
GABA to suppress neurons in the brain that induce walking.
The "Brake" mechanism, on
the other hand, employed by the excitatory cholinergic Brake neurons in the
nerve cord, actively prevents stepping by increasing the resistance at the leg
joints and providing postural stability.
This mechanism is similar to
stepping on the brake in your car to actively stop the wheels from turning. And
just as you would remove your foot from the gas to step on the brake, the
"Brake" mechanism also inhibits walking-promotion neurons in addition
to preventing stepping.
Lead researcher on the project,
Neha Sapkal, describes the team's excitement at discovering the
"Brake" mechanism. "Whereas the 'Walk-Off' mechanism was similar
to stopping mechanisms identified in other animal models, the 'Brake' mechanism
was completely new and caused such robust stopping in the fly. We were
immediately interested in understanding how and when the fly would use these
different mechanisms."
Context-specific activation of halt mechanisms
To determine when the fly might use
the "Walk-OFF" and "Brake" mechanisms, the team again took
multiple approaches, including predictive modeling based on the wiring diagram
of the fly nervous
system, recording
the activity of halting neurons in the fly, and disrupting the mechanisms in
different behavioral scenarios.
Their findings suggested that the
two mechanisms were used mutually exclusively in different behavioral contexts
and were activated by relevant environmental cues. The "Walk-OFF"
mechanism is engaged in the context of feeding and activated by sugar-sensing
neurons. On the other hand, the "Brake" mechanism is used during
grooming and is predicted to be activated by the sensory information coming from the bristles of the fly.
During grooming, the fly must lift
several legs and maintain balance. The Brake mechanism provides this stability
through the active resistance at joints and increased postural stability of the
standing legs. Indeed, when the scientists disrupted the "Brake"
mechanism, flies often tipped over during grooming attempts.
"The fly brain has provided
insight into how contextual information engages specific mechanisms of
behaviors such as stopping."
Bidaye says, "We hope
understanding these mechanisms will allow us to identify similar
context-specific processes in other animals. In humans, when we stop and lift
our foot to adjust our shoe or remove a stone from our tread, we are likely
taking advantage of a stabilizing mechanism similar to the Brake mechanism.
"Understanding context-specific neural circuits and how they work together with other sensory and motor circuits is the key to understanding complex behaviors."
by Max
Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience
Source: Scientists decode brain mechanisms of stopping in Drosophila (phys.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment