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Multimodal stimulus coding by a gustatory sensory neuron in Drosophila larvae

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Listed:
  • Lena van Giesen
  • Hernandez-Nunez, Luis
  • Sophie Delasoie-Baranek
  • Martino Colombo
  • Philippe Renaud
  • Bruggmann, Remy
  • Richard Benton
  • Aravinthan D. T. Samuel
  • Simon Sprecher

Abstract

Accurate perception of taste information is crucial for animal survival. In adult Drosophila, gustatory receptor neurons (GRNs) perceive chemical stimuli of one specific gustatory modality associated with a stereotyped behavioural response, such as aversion or attraction. We show that GRNs of Drosophila larvae employ a surprisingly different mode of gustatory information coding. Using a novel method for calcium imaging in the larval gustatory system, we identify a multimodal GRN that responds to chemicals of different taste modalities with opposing valence, such as sweet sucrose and bitter denatonium, reliant on different sensory receptors. This multimodal neuron is essential for bitter compound avoidance, and its artificial activation is sufficient to mediate aversion. However, the neuron is also essential for the integration of taste blends. Our findings support a model for taste coding in larvae, in which distinct receptor proteins mediate different responses within the same, multimodal GRN.

Suggested Citation

  • Lena van Giesen & Hernandez-Nunez, Luis & Sophie Delasoie-Baranek & Martino Colombo & Philippe Renaud & Bruggmann, Remy & Richard Benton & Aravinthan D. T. Samuel & Simon Sprecher, "undated". "Multimodal stimulus coding by a gustatory sensory neuron in Drosophila larvae," Working Paper 374196, Harvard University OpenScholar.
  • Handle: RePEc:qsh:wpaper:374196
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    File URL: http://scholar.harvard.edu/aravisamuel/node/374196
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