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Journal ArticleDOI

Subdivisions of hymenopteran mushroom body calyces by their afferent supply

Wulfila Gronenberg
- 09 Jul 2001 - 
- Vol. 435, Iss: 4, pp 474-489
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TLDR
The data suggest that the many parallel channels of intrinsic neurons may each process different aspects of sensory input information within the mushroom body's calyx, which is particularly large in social Hymenoptera.
Abstract
The mushroom bodies are regions in the insect brain involved in processing complex multimodal information. They are composed of many parallel sets of intrinsic neurons that receive input from and transfer output to extrinsic neurons that connect the mushroom bodies with the surrounding neuropils. Mushroom bodies are particularly large in social Hymenoptera and are thought to be involved in the control of conspicuous orientation, learning, and memory capabilities of these insects. The present account compares the organization of sensory input to the mushroom body's calyx in different Hymenoptera. Tracer and conventional neuronal staining procedures reveal the following anatomic characteristics: The calyx comprises three subdivisions, the lip, collar, and basal ring. The lip receives antennal lobe afferents, and these olfactory input neurons can terminate in two or more segregated zones within the lip. The collar receives visual afferents that are bilateral with equal representation of both eyes in each calyx. Visual inputs provide two to three layers of processes in the collar subdivision. The basal ring is subdivided into two modality-specific zones, one receiving visual, the other antennal lobe input. Some overlap of modality exists between calycal subdivisions and within the basal ring, and the degree of segregation of sensory input within the calyx is species-specific. The data suggest that the many parallel channels of intrinsic neurons may each process different aspects of sensory input information.

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Roles of glial cells in neural circuit formation: insights from research in insects

TL;DR: The impact of studies performed in insects are emphasized and how insect nervous systems might best be exploited next are explored as scientists seek to understand in yet deeper detail the full repertory of functions of glia in development.
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Postembryonic development of the mushroom bodies in the ant, Camponotus japonicus.

TL;DR: Mature MBs of carpenter ants and honey bees reportedly comprise almost the same number of neurons, and it is suggested that the MB neuroblasts in C. japonicus divide more often in order to produce a final number of MB neurons similar to that of honey bees.
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Synaptogenesis in the mushroom body calyx during metamorphosis in the honeybee Apis mellifera: an electron microscopic study.

TL;DR: These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that most of the synapses established during metamorphosis provide the structural basis for afferent information flow to calyces, whereas maturation of local synaptic circuitry is likely to occur after adult emergence.
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A honey bee Dscam family member, AbsCAM, is a brain-specific cell adhesion molecule with the neurite outgrowth activity which influences neuronal wiring during development.

TL;DR: Results suggest that AbsCAM is the first honey bee IgSF implicated as functioning in neuronal wiring during honey bee brain development, and promoted the neurite outgrowth of cultured neurons isolated from honey bee pupal brains.
References
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Book

The Insect Societies

TL;DR: In this article, a definitive study of the social structure and symbiotic relationships of termites, social wasps, bees, and ants was conducted. But the authors focused on the relationship between ants and termites.
Book

The dance language and orientation of bees

TL;DR: The Dance Language and Orientation of Bees as discussed by the authors is a seminal work in the field of honeybee behavior that describes in non-technical language what he discovered in a lifetime of study about honeybees - their methods of orientation, their sensory faculties, and their remarkable ability to communicate with one another.
Journal Article

The Insect Societies

TL;DR: The author wished to relate the three phases of research on insects and to express insect sociology as population biology in this detailed survey of knowledge of insect societies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Associative odor learning in Drosophila abolished by chemical ablation of mushroom bodies

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that MBs mediate associative odor learning in flies, and that adult flies developing without MBs are unable to perform in a classical conditioning paradigm that tests associative learning of odor cues and electric shock.
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Trending Questions (1)
How are the zones in the mushroom body formed?

The zones in the mushroom body are formed based on the specific sensory inputs they receive, with subdivisions like the lip, collar, and basal ring processing olfactory, visual, and mixed inputs.