Central synaptic mechanisms underlie short-term olfactory habituation in Drosophila larvae
Author(s) -
Aoife Larkin,
Somdatta Karak,
Rashi Priya,
Abhijit Das,
Champakali Ayyub,
Kei Ito,
Verônica Rodrigues,
Mani Ramaswami
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
learning and memory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.228
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1549-5485
pISSN - 1072-0502
DOI - 10.1101/lm.1839010
Subject(s) - neuroscience , habituation , excitatory postsynaptic potential , antennal lobe , olfactory system , nmda receptor , neurotransmission , sensory system , inhibitory postsynaptic potential , sensory adaptation , synaptic plasticity , biology , gabaergic , chemistry , receptor , biochemistry
Naive Drosophila larvae show vigorous chemotaxis toward many odorants including ethyl acetate (EA). Chemotaxis toward EA is substantially reduced after a 5-min pre-exposure to the odorant and recovers with a half-time of ∼20 min. An analogous behavioral decrement can be induced without odorant-receptor activation through channelrhodopsin-based, direct photoexcitation of odorant sensory neurons (OSNs). The neural mechanism of short-term habituation (STH) requires the (1) rutabaga adenylate cyclase; (2) transmitter release from predominantly GABAergic local interneurons (LNs); (3) GABA-A receptor function in projection neurons (PNs) that receive excitatory inputs from OSNs; and (4) NMDA-receptor function in PNs. These features of STH cannot be explained by simple sensory adaptation and, instead, point to plasticity of olfactory synapses in the antennal lobe as the underlying mechanism. Our observations suggest a model in which NMDAR-dependent depression of the OSN-PN synapse and/or NMDAR-dependent facilitation of inhibitory transmission from LNs to PNs contributes substantially to short-term habituation.
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