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Published January 26, 2009 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

A circuit supporting concentration-invariant odor perception in Drosophila

Abstract

Background: Most odors are perceived to have the same quality over a large concentration range, but the neural mechanisms that permit concentration-invariant olfactory perception are unknown. In larvae of the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster, odors are sensed by an array of 25 odorant receptors expressed in 21 olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs). We investigated how subsets of larval OSNs with overlapping but distinct response properties cooperate to mediate perception of a given odorant across a range of concentrations. Results: Using calcium imaging, we found that ethyl butyrate, an ester perceived by humans as fruity, activated three OSNs with response thresholds that varied across three orders of magnitude. Whereas wild-type larvae were strongly attracted by this odor across a 500-fold range of concentration, individuals with only a single functional OSN showed attraction across a narrower concentration range corresponding to the sensitivity of each ethyl butyrate-tuned OSN. To clarify how the information carried by different OSNs is integrated by the olfactory system, we characterized the response properties of local inhibitory interneurons and projection neurons in the antennal lobe. Local interneurons only responded to high ethyl butyrate concentrations upon summed activation of at least two OSNs. Projection neurons showed a reduced response to odors when summed input from two OSNs impinged on the circuit compared to when there was only a single functional OSN. Conclusions: Our results show that increasing odor concentrations induce progressive activation of concentration-tuned olfactory sensory neurons and concomitant recruitment of inhibitory local interneurons. We propose that the interplay of combinatorial OSN input and local interneuron activation allows animals to remain sensitive to odors across a large range of stimulus intensities.

Additional Information

© Asahina et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2009. This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Received: 17 October 2008. Accepted: 22 December 2008. Published: 26 January 2009. We thank R Axel, K Ito, J Nakai, R Stocker, R Tsien, and A Wong for plasmid and fly reagents, CG Galizia and M Ditzen for providing custom imaging analysis software, and C Marney for initiating experiments that led to the discovery of circling behavior in Figure 3. We are grateful to CG Galizia, who provided space and training in calcium imaging to KA at an early stage of this project and T Huber who provided technical advice on the FT-IR measurements. M Frye and members of the Vosshall laboratory provided helpful comments on the manuscript. This work was funded by a Revson Postdoctoral fellowship to ML and by NIH RO1 DC006711 to LBV. Additional data file 1 contains additional Figures S1–S6 and information on genotypes of all Drosophila strains used in this paper. Authors' contributions: KA carried out the imaging and immunostaining in Figures 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and S1–S5. ML supervised and SP carried out the behavioral experiments in Figures 3 and 4. Analysis of the behavioral data was jointly performed by ML and SP. LBV directed the project and together with the other authors wrote the paper.

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