Litcius/Paper detail

Diversity of visual inputs to Kenyon cells of the Drosophila mushroom body

Ishani Ganguly, Emily L. Heckman, Ashok Litwin-Kumar, E. Josephine Clowney, Rudy Behnia

2024Nature Communications20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The arthropod mushroom body is well-studied as an expansion layer representing olfactory stimuli and linking them to contingent events. However, 8% of mushroom body Kenyon cells in Drosophila melanogaster receive predominantly visual input, and their function remains unclear. Here, we identify inputs to visual Kenyon cells using the FlyWire adult whole-brain connectome. Input repertoires are similar across hemispheres and connectomes with certain inputs highly overrepresented. Many visual neurons presynaptic to Kenyon cells have large receptive fields, while interneuron inputs receive spatially restricted signals that may be tuned to specific visual features. Individual visual Kenyon cells randomly sample sparse inputs from combinations of visual channels, including multiple optic lobe neuropils. These connectivity patterns suggest that visual coding in the mushroom body, like olfactory coding, is sparse, distributed, and combinatorial. However, the specific input repertoire to the smaller population of visual Kenyon cells suggests a constrained encoding of visual stimuli.

Topics & Concepts

Mushroom bodiesNeuroscienceConnectomeBiologyInterneuronNeural codingPopulationDrosophila melanogasterFunctional connectivityInhibitory postsynaptic potentialMedicineGeneticsGeneEnvironmental healthNeurobiology and Insect Physiology ResearchInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorAnimal Behavior and Reproduction