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Metamorphosis of an identified serotonergic neuron in the Drosophila olfactory system.

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TLDR
These studies establish a cellular system for studying remodeling of a central neuromodulatory feedback neuron in the Drosophila olfactory pathway and identify key elements in this process.
Abstract
Odors are detected by sensory neurons that carry information to the olfactory lobe where they connect to projection neurons and local interneurons in glomeruli: anatomically well-characterized structures that collect, integrate and relay information to higher centers. Recent studies have revealed that the sensitivity of such networks can be modulated by wide-field feedback neurons. The connectivity and function of such feedback neurons are themselves subject to alteration by external cues, such as hormones, stress, or experience. Very little is known about how this class of central neurons changes its anatomical properties to perform functions in altered developmental contexts. A mechanistic understanding of how central neurons change their anatomy to meet new functional requirements will benefit greatly from the establishment of a model preparation where cellular and molecular changes can be examined in an identified central neuron. In this study, we examine a wide-field serotonergic neuron in the Drosophila olfactory pathway and map the dramatic changes that it undergoes from larva to adult. We show that expression of a dominant-negative form of the ecdysterone receptor prevents remodeling. We further use different transgenic constructs to silence neuronal activity and report defects in the morphology of the adult-specific dendritic trees. The branching of the presynaptic axonal arbors is regulated by mechanisms that affect axon growth and retrograde transport. The neuron develops its normal morphology in the absence of sensory input to the antennal lobe, or of the mushroom bodies. However, ablation of its presumptive postsynaptic partners, the projection neurons and/or local interneurons, affects the growth and branching of terminal arbors. Our studies establish a cellular system for studying remodeling of a central neuromodulatory feedback neuron and also identify key elements in this process. Understanding the morphogenesis of such neurons, which have been shown in other systems to modulate the sensitivity and directionality of response to odors, links anatomy to the development of olfactory behavior.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetically encoded dendritic marker sheds light on neuronal connectivity in Drosophila.

TL;DR: This work develops a genetically encoded, specific, universal, and phenotypically neutral marker of the somatodendritic compartment of Drosophila melanogaster that is effective and specific in all neuronal populations tested in the peripheral and central nervous system.
Posted ContentDOI

A Complete Electron Microscopy Volume Of The Brain Of Adult Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: A custom high-throughput EM platform was developed and the entire adult fruit fly brain was imaged, using electron microscopy, enabling brain-spanning mapping of neuronal circuits at the synaptic level and finding that axonal arbors providing input to the MB calyx are more tightly clustered than previously indicated by light-level data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in neuropeptide signaling in Drosophila, from genes to physiology and behavior.

TL;DR: The roles of peptides in olfaction, taste, foraging, feeding, clock function/sleep, aggression, mating/reproduction, learning and other behaviors, as well as in regulation of development, growth, metabolic and water homeostasis, stress responses, fecundity, and lifespan are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The wiring diagram of a glomerular olfactory system.

TL;DR: This complete wiring diagram of the Drosophila larval antennal lobe is mapped with electron microscopy and putatively implement a bistable gain control mechanism that either computes odor saliency through panglomerular inhibition, or allows some glomeruli to respond to faint aversive odors in the presence of strong appetitive odors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mosaic analysis with a repressible cell marker for studies of gene function in neuronal morphogenesis.

Tzumin Lee, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1999 - 
TL;DR: A genetic mosaic system in Drosophila is described, in which a dominant repressor of a cell marker is placed in trans to a mutant gene of interest, which allows for the study of gene functions in neuroblast proliferation, axon guidance, and dendritic elaboration in the complex central nervous system.
Journal ArticleDOI

An olfactory sensory map in the fly brain

TL;DR: The "complete" repertoire of genes encoding the odorant receptors in Drosophila are isolated and employ these genes to provide a molecular description of the organization of the peripheral olfactory system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Organization of the Chemosensory System in Drosophila Melanogaster: A Review

TL;DR: This review surveys the organization of the olfactory and gustatory systems in the imago and in the larva of Drosophila melanogaster, both at the sensory and the central level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Targeted expression of tetanus toxin light chain in Drosophila specifically eliminates synaptic transmission and causes behavioral defects

TL;DR: To further the study of synaptic function in a genetically tractable organism and to generate a tool to disable neuronal communication for behavioural studies, a gene encoding tetanus toxin light chain is expressed in Drosophila.
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