Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.

The ability to modify behavior based on prior experience is essential to an animal's survival. For example, animals may become attracted to a previously neutral odor or reject a previously appetitive food source based on previous encounters. In Drosophila, the mushroom bodies (MBs) are critical...

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Main Authors: Justine Chia, Kristin Scott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223034
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author Justine Chia
Kristin Scott
author_facet Justine Chia
Kristin Scott
author_sort Justine Chia
collection DOAJ
description The ability to modify behavior based on prior experience is essential to an animal's survival. For example, animals may become attracted to a previously neutral odor or reject a previously appetitive food source based on previous encounters. In Drosophila, the mushroom bodies (MBs) are critical for olfactory associative learning and conditioned taste aversion, but how the output of the MBs affects specific behavioral responses is unresolved. In conditioned taste aversion, Drosophila shows a specific behavioral change upon learning: proboscis extension to sugar is reduced after a sugar stimulus is paired with an aversive stimulus. While studies have identified MB output neurons (MBONs) that drive approach or avoidance behavior, whether the same MBONs impact innate proboscis extension behavior is unknown. Here, we tested the role of MB pathways in altering proboscis extension and identified MBONs that synapse onto multiple MB compartments that upon activation significantly decreased proboscis extension to sugar. Activating several of these lines also decreased sugar consumption, revealing that these MBONs have a general role in modifying feeding behavior beyond proboscis extension. The MBONs that decreased proboscis extension and ingestion are different from those that drive avoidance behavior in another context. These studies provide insight into how activation of MB output neurons decreases proboscis extension to taste compounds.
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spelling doaj.art-036ba67e57aa45448db22414d6a9381c2022-12-21T23:10:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01151e022303410.1371/journal.pone.0223034Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.Justine ChiaKristin ScottThe ability to modify behavior based on prior experience is essential to an animal's survival. For example, animals may become attracted to a previously neutral odor or reject a previously appetitive food source based on previous encounters. In Drosophila, the mushroom bodies (MBs) are critical for olfactory associative learning and conditioned taste aversion, but how the output of the MBs affects specific behavioral responses is unresolved. In conditioned taste aversion, Drosophila shows a specific behavioral change upon learning: proboscis extension to sugar is reduced after a sugar stimulus is paired with an aversive stimulus. While studies have identified MB output neurons (MBONs) that drive approach or avoidance behavior, whether the same MBONs impact innate proboscis extension behavior is unknown. Here, we tested the role of MB pathways in altering proboscis extension and identified MBONs that synapse onto multiple MB compartments that upon activation significantly decreased proboscis extension to sugar. Activating several of these lines also decreased sugar consumption, revealing that these MBONs have a general role in modifying feeding behavior beyond proboscis extension. The MBONs that decreased proboscis extension and ingestion are different from those that drive avoidance behavior in another context. These studies provide insight into how activation of MB output neurons decreases proboscis extension to taste compounds.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223034
spellingShingle Justine Chia
Kristin Scott
Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
PLoS ONE
title Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
title_full Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
title_fullStr Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
title_full_unstemmed Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
title_short Activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption.
title_sort activation of specific mushroom body output neurons inhibits proboscis extension and sucrose consumption
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223034
work_keys_str_mv AT justinechia activationofspecificmushroombodyoutputneuronsinhibitsproboscisextensionandsucroseconsumption
AT kristinscott activationofspecificmushroombodyoutputneuronsinhibitsproboscisextensionandsucroseconsumption