Neuron
Volume 92, Issue 4, 23 November 2016, Pages 888-901
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Article
A Mechanosensory Circuit that Mixes Opponent Channels to Produce Selectivity for Complex Stimulus Features

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2016.09.059Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • aPN3 cells in the fly brain combine input from opponent antennal mechanoreceptors

  • aPN3 cells encode slow antennal movements and vibration amplitude modulations

  • Different cells are selective for distinct spatiotemporal features of these stimuli

  • Selectivity depends on the ratio of excitation and inhibition from opponent inputs

Summary

Johnston’s organ is the largest mechanosensory organ in Drosophila; it analyzes movements of the antenna due to sound, wind, gravity, and touch. Different Johnston’s organ neurons (JONs) encode distinct stimulus features. Certain JONs respond in a sustained manner to steady displacements, and these JONs subdivide into opponent populations that prefer push or pull displacements. Here, we describe neurons in the brain (aPN3 neurons) that combine excitation and inhibition from push/pull JONs in different ratios. Consequently, different aPN3 neurons are sensitive to movement in different parts of the antenna’s range, at different frequencies, or at different amplitude modulation rates. We use a model to show how the tuning of aPN3 neurons can arise from rectification and temporal filtering in JONs, followed by mixing of JON signals in different proportions. These results illustrate how several canonical neural circuit components—rectification, opponency, and filtering—can combine to produce selectivity for complex stimulus features.

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Present address: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, USA

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