4.4 Article

Morphological characterization of single fan-shaped body neurons in Drosophila melanogaster

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 336, Issue 3, Pages 509-519

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-009-0781-2

Keywords

Central complex; Fan-shaped body; Large-field neuron; Visual pattern memory; Drosophila melanogaster (Insecta)

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The fan-shaped body is the largest substructure of the central complex in Drosophila melanogaster. Two groups of large-field neurons that innervate the fan-shaped body, viz., F1 and F5 neurons, have recently been found to be involved in visual pattern memory for contour orientation and elevation in a rut-dependent manner. The F5 neurons have been found to be responsible for the parameter elevation in a for-dependent manner. We have shown here that the F1 neuron also affects visual memory for contour orientation in a for-dependent way. With the help of Gal4/UAS and FLP-out techniques, we have characterized the morphological features of these two groups of neurons at single neuron resolution. We have observed that F1 or F5 neurons are groups of isomorphic individual neurons. Single F1 neurons have three main arborization regions: one in the first layer of the fan-shaped body, one in the ventral body, and another in the inferior medial protocerebrum. Single F5 neurons have two arborization regions: one in the fifth layer of the fan-shaped body and the other in the superior medial protocerebrum. The polarity of the F1 and F5 neurons has been studied with the Syt-GFP marker. Our results indicate the existence of presynaptic sites of both F1 and F5 neurons located in the fan-shaped body and postsynaptic sites outside of the fan-shaped body.

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