Connecting the eye to the brain: retina structure shapes neuron function in Drosophila motion vision

ORAL

Abstract

The changes in the visual scene caused by movement generate optic flows, which are used by animals to guide navigation. In flies, optic flow is first estimated in small patches by directionally selective T4 neurons, then integrated by downstream “self-motion” neurons. Because of the limitations of conventional methods, the diversity of self-motion neurons and the visual patterns that flies can detect remains largely unknown. Here we scanned a whole fly head using µCT to determine the ommatidia’s viewing directions. We then reconstructed hundreds of T4 neurons and all their columnar input Mi1 neurons in a whole brain EM volume. We computed the T4 preferred directions (PDs) in a global anatomical reference frame established by the Mi1 neurons. Using the 1-to-1 mapping between the ommatidia and columnar neurons, we then mapped T4 PDs to the eye coordinates. We observed a stereotypical arborization pattern of T4 dendrites, and a retina location-dependent directional tuning of the PDs, providing a simple anatomical basis for previously unexplained observations about the structure of encoded optic flow fields. Finally, we identified and reconstructed the complete set of self-motion neurons in the same EM volume. Using the T4 PD map, we computationally predicted the receptive fields of these self-motion neurons and the body motion they encode. These predictions compare favorably with available physiology measurements, and readily provide experimentally testable hypotheses for future studies.

Publication: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.12.14.520178v1
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.10.16.562634v1

Presenters

  • Arthur Zhao

    • Janelia Research Campus

Authors

  • Arthur Zhao

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Eyal Gruntman

    • University of Toronto
  • Aljoscha Nern

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Nirmala Iyer

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Ed Rogers

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Sanna Koskela

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Marisa Dreher

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Igor Siwanowicz

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Miriam Flynn

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Connor Laughland

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Ludwig Henrique

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Alex Thomson

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Cullen Moran

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Bruck Gezahgen

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Mert Erginkaya

    • Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown
  • Ruchi Parekh

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Judith Hoeller

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Sandro Romani

    • Janelia Research Campus
  • Eugenia Chiappe

    • Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown
  • Davi Bock

    • Janelia Research Campus / University of Vermont
  • Michael Reiser

    • Janelia Research Campus