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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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Neuronal assemblies of the Drosophila mushroom body.

TL;DR: The laminar arrangement of the Kenyon cell axons and segmented organization of the MBENs together divide the lobes into smaller synaptic units, possibly facilitating characteristic interaction between intrinsic and extrinsic neurons in each unit for different functional activities along the longitudinal lobe axes and between lobes.
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Organization of the honey bee mushroom body: representation of the calyx within the vertical and gamma lobes.

TL;DR: The present account shows that, although these zones are represented in the lobes, they occupy only two thirds of the vertical lobe, and suggests the need for critical reinterpretation of studies that have been predicated on early descriptions of the mushroom body's lobes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Selective neuroanatomical plasticity and division of labour in the honeybee

TL;DR: It is reported that age-based division of labour in adult worker honeybees (Apis mellifera) is associated with substantial changes in certain brain regions, notably the mushroom bodies, demonstrating a robust anatomical plasticity associated with complex behaviour in an adult insect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and Function of the Deutocerebrum in Insects

TL;DR: This work has shown that both areas of the deutocerebrum receive primary sensory fibers from receptor cells in the antenna and most and possibly all axons of olfactory receptor belong to the antennal lobe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mushroom bodies of the cockroach: their participation in place memory.

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the integrity of the pedunculus and medial lobe of a single mushroom body is required for place memory in a single cockroach, and the results were comparable to the results obtained from hippocampal lesions in rats and are relevant to recent studies on the effects of ablations of Drosophila mushroom bodies on locomotion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anatomy of the mushroom bodies in the honey bee brain: The neuronal connections of the alpha-lobe

TL;DR: The connections of different compartments of the MB with other parts of the protocerebrum as revealed in this study are discussed in the context of hypotheses about the functional role of MBs in the honeybee brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural correlates of olfactory learning paradigms in an identified neuron in the honeybee brain

TL;DR: Sensitization and classical odor conditioning of the proboscis extension reflex were functionally analyzed by repeated intracellular recordings from a single identified neuron (PE1-neuron) in the central bee brain, revealing differential effects of nonassociative and associative stimulus paradigms on the response behavior of the PE1-NEuron.
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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.