OCULOMOTOR CONTROL IN CALLIPHORID FLIES - ORGANIZATION OF DESCENDING NEURONS TO NECK MOTOR-NEURONS RESPONDING TO VISUAL-STIMULI

被引:40
作者
GRONENBERG, W
MILDE, JJ
STRAUSFELD, NJ
机构
[1] UNIV ARIZONA, DIV NEUROBIOL, ARIZONA RES LABS, TUCSON, AZ 85721 USA
[2] THEODOR BOVERI INST, W-8700 WURZBURG, GERMANY
[3] UNIV COLOGNE, INST ZOOL, W-5000 COLOGNE 41, GERMANY
关键词
HEAD STABILIZATION; MULTIMODAL INTEGRATION; NEUROPHYSIOLOGY; NEUROANATOMY;
D O I
10.1002/cne.903610206
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
In insects, head movements are mediated by neck muscles supplied by nerves originating in the brain and prothoracic ganglion. Extracellular recordings of the nerves demonstrate units that respond to visual stimulation of the compound eyes and to mechanosensory stimulation of the halteres. The number of neck muscles required for optokinetic eye movements in flies is not known, although in other taxa, eye movements can involve as few as three pairs of muscles. This study investigates which neck motor neurons are likely to be involved in head movements by examining the relationships between neck muscle motor neurons and the terminals visiting them from approximately 50 pairs of descending neurons. Many of these descending neurons have dendrites in neuropils that are associated with modalities other than vision, and recordings show that visual stimuli activate only a few neck motor neurons, such as the sclerite depressor neurons, which respond to local or wide-field, directionally specific motion, as do a subset of descending neurons coupled to them. The results suggest that, like in the vertebrate eye or the retinas of jumping spiders, optokinetic head movements of flies require only a few muscles. In addition to the importance of visual inputs, a major supply to neck muscle centers by nonvisual descending neurons suggests a role for tactile, gustatory, and olfactory signals in controlling head position. (C) 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:267 / 284
页数:18
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   SUBESOPHAGEAL NEURONS INVOLVED IN HEAD MOVEMENTS AND FEEDING IN LOCUSTS [J].
ALTMAN, JS ;
KIEN, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1979, 205 (1159) :209-+
[2]  
ARBAS E A, 1986, Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, V12, P857
[3]   THE TRITOCEREBRAL COMMISSURE GIANT (TCG) WIND-SENSITIVE INTERNEURONE IN THE LOCUST .1. ITS ACTIVITY IN STRAIGHT FLIGHT [J].
BACON, JP ;
MOHL, B .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 1983, 150 (04) :439-452
[4]   TRITOCEREBRAL COMMISSURE GIANT (TCG) - BIMODAL INTERNEURONE IN LOCUST, SCHISTOCERCA-GREGARIA [J].
BACON, JP ;
TYRER, M .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 1978, 126 (04) :317-325
[5]   THE DIPTERAN GIANT FIBER PATHWAY - NEURONS AND SIGNALS [J].
BACON, JP ;
STRAUSFELD, NJ .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY A-SENSORY NEURAL AND BEHAVIORAL PHYSIOLOGY, 1986, 158 (04) :529-548
[6]   CYTOLOGY OF COBALT-FILLED NEURONS IN FLIES - COBALT DEPOSITS AT PRE-SYNAPTIC AND POSTSYNAPTIC SITES, MITOCHONDRIA AND THE CYTOSKELETON [J].
BASSEMIR, UK ;
STRAUSFELD, NJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROCYTOLOGY, 1983, 12 (06) :949-970
[7]   THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM OF DAPHNIA-MAGNA - THE EYE-MUSCLES AND THEIR MOTOR NEURONS [J].
CONSI, TR ;
MACAGNO, ER ;
NECLES, N .
CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH, 1987, 247 (03) :515-523
[8]   OCULOMOTOR CONTROL IN CALLIPHORID FLIES - HEAD MOVEMENTS DURING ACTIVATION AND INHIBITION OF NECK MOTOR-NEURONS CORROBORATE NEUROANATOMICAL PREDICTIONS [J].
GILBERT, C ;
GRONENBERG, W ;
STRAUSFELD, NJ .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 1995, 361 (02) :285-297
[9]   CAMPANIFORM SENSILLA OF CALLIPHORA-VICINA (INSECTA, DIPTERA) .1. TOPOGRAPHY [J].
GNATZY, W ;
GRUNERT, U ;
BENDER, M .
ZOOMORPHOLOGY, 1987, 106 (05) :312-319
[10]   DESCENDING NEURONS SUPPLYING THE NECK AND FLIGHT MOTOR OF DIPTERA - PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ANATOMICAL CHARACTERISTICS [J].
GRONENBERG, W ;
STRAUSFELD, NJ .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 1990, 302 (04) :973-991