4.7 Article

Granger Causality Analysis of Transient Calcium Dynamics in the Honey Bee Antennal Lobe Network

Journal

INSECTS
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/insects14060539

Keywords

antennal lobe; Granger causality; calcium imaging; olfaction; sensory network; two-photon microscopy

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In this study, the neuronal activity in the honey bee's peripheral olfactory system, the antennal lobes, was imaged. A new approach was used to analyze the causal connections between the glomeruli instead of just focusing on their activity patterns. The analysis showed that these connections are present even without olfactory stimulation and become odorant-specific upon exposure to an odor pulse.
Simple Summary In this work, we imaged the neuronal activity in the peripheral olfactory system of honey bees, the antennal lobes. Instead of the conventional analysis that focuses on the activity patterns in the network nodes, the glomeruli, we present a new approach that analyzes the causal connections between glomeruli. Our analysis shows that such links are present even in the absence of olfactory stimulation and that, upon exposure to an odor pulse, the connectivity increases and the structure of the connections becomes odorant-specific. This approach allows mapping the information flow that underlies the formation of odor-specific response maps in the antennal lobe. Odorant processing presents multiple parallels across animal species, and insects became relevant models for the study of olfactory coding because of the tractability of the underlying neural circuits. Within the insect brain, odorants are received by olfactory sensory neurons and processed by the antennal lobe network. Such a network comprises multiple nodes, named glomeruli, that receive sensory information and are interconnected by local interneurons participating in shaping the neural representation of an odorant. The study of functional connectivity between the nodes of a sensory network in vivo is a challenging task that requires simultaneous recording from multiple nodes at high temporal resolutions. Here, we followed the calcium dynamics of antennal lobe glomeruli and applied Granger causality analysis to assess the functional connectivity among network nodes in the presence and absence of an odorous stimulus. This approach revealed the existence of causal connectivity links between antennal lobe glomeruli in the absence of olfactory stimulation, while at odor arrival, the connectivity network's density increased and became stimulus-specific. Thus, such an analytical approach may provide a new tool for the investigation of neural network plasticity in vivo.

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