Abstract

The insect central complex and vertebrate basal ganglia are forebrain centres involved in selection and maintenance of behavioural actions. However, little is known about the formation of the underlying circuits, or how they integrate sensory information for motor actions. Here, we show that paired embryonic neuroblasts generate central complex ring neurons that mediate sensory-motor transformation and action selection in Drosophila. Lineage analysis resolves four ring neuron subtypes, R1-R4, that form GABAergic inhibition circuitry among inhibitory sister cells. Genetic manipulations, together with functional imaging, demonstrate subtype-specific R neurons mediate the selection and maintenance of behavioural activity. A computational model substantiates genetic and behavioural observations suggesting that R neuron circuitry functions as salience detector using competitive inhibition to amplify, maintain or switch between activity states. The resultant gating mechanism translates facilitation, inhibition and disinhibition of behavioural activity as R neuron functions into selection of motor actions and their organisation into action sequences.

Details

Title
A lineage-related reciprocal inhibition circuitry for sensory-motor action selection
Author
Kottler, Benjamin; Fiore, Vincenzo G; Ludlow, Zoe N; Buhl, Edgar; Vinatier, Gerald; Faville, Richard; Diaper, Danielle C; Stepto, Alan; Dearlove, Jonah; Adachi, Yoshitsugu; Brown, Sheena; Chen, Chenghao; Solomon, Daniel A; White, Katherine E; Humphrey, Dickon M; Buchanan, Sean M; Sigrist, Stephan J; Endo, Keita; Ito, Kei; De Bivort, Benjamin; Stanewsky, Ralf; Dolan, Raymond J; Jean-Rene, Martin; Hodge, James Jl; Strausfeld, Nicholas J; Hirth, Frank
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Jan 15, 2017
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2070155315
Copyright
�� 2017. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/ (���the License���). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.