4.6 Article

Ultra high-resolution biomechanics suggest that substructures within insect mechanosensors decisively affect their sensitivity

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 19, Issue 190, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2022.0102

Keywords

load sensors; campaniform sensilla; finite-element analysis; principal component analysis; Drosophila melanogaster; strain

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [233886668/GRK1960]
  2. EPSRC [EP/M008428/1, EP/N032888/1]
  3. Royal Academy of Engineering [CiET1718\59]
  4. research grant 'C3CNS' in the international NeuroNex-programme (DFG) [Bu857/15, BL1355/6-1 [436258345]]

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Insect load sensors called campaniform sensilla measure strain changes in appendages and provide feedback for posture and locomotion. Different campaniform sensilla morphologies encode different strain directions, and their substructures influence strain distribution.
Insect load sensors, called campaniform sensilla (CS), measure strain changes within the cuticle of appendages. This mechanotransduction provides the neuromuscular system with feedback for posture and locomotion. Owing to their diverse morphology and arrangement, CS can encode different strain directions. We used nano-computed tomography and finite-element analysis to investigate how different CS morphologies within one location-the femoral CS field of the leg in the fruit fly Drosophila-interact under load. By investigating the influence of CS substructures' material properties during simulated limb displacement with naturalistic forces, we could show that CS substructures (i.e. socket and collar) influence strain distribution throughout the whole CS field. Altered socket and collar elastic moduli resulted in 5% relative differences in displacement, and the artificial removal of all sockets caused differences greater than 20% in cap displacement. Apparently, CS sockets support the distribution of distal strain to more proximal CS, while collars alter CS displacement more locally. Harder sockets can increase or decrease CS displacement depending on sensor location. Furthermore, high-resolution imaging revealed that sockets are interconnected in subcuticular rows. In summary, the sensitivity of individual CS is dependent on the configuration of other CS and their substructures.

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