4.6 Article

Direction Selectivity of TmY Neurites in Drosophila

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE BULLETIN
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 759-773

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12264-022-00966-y

Keywords

Direction selectivity; TmY-ds; Synaptic connection; Two-photon calcium imaging; Drosophila

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The perception of motion is an important function of vision. Through connectome reconstruction, a new type of TmY-ds neuron has been discovered in Drosophila, which forms reciprocal synaptic connections with T4/T5 neurons. The direction selectivity of TmY-ds neurons originates from temporal filtering neurons rather than T4/T5 neurons.
The perception of motion is an important function of vision. Neural wiring diagrams for extracting directional information have been obtained by connectome reconstruction. Direction selectivity in Drosophila is thought to originate in T4/T5 neurons through integrating inputs with different temporal filtering properties. Through genetic screening based on synaptic distribution, we isolated a new type of TmY neuron, termed TmY-ds, that form reciprocal synaptic connections with T4/T5 neurons. Its neurites responded to grating motion along the four cardinal directions and showed a variety of direction selectivity. Intriguingly, its direction selectivity originated from temporal filtering neurons rather than T4/T5. Genetic silencing and activation experiments showed that TmY-ds neurons are functionally upstream of T4/T5. Our results suggest that direction selectivity is generated in a tripartite circuit formed among these three neurons-temporal filtering, TmY-ds, and T4/T5 neurons, in which TmY-ds plays a role in the enhancement of direction selectivity in T4/T5 neurons.

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