Author:
Honegger Kyle S.,Smith Matthew A.-Y.,Churgin Matthew A.,Turner Glenn C.,de Bivort Benjamin L.
Abstract
Innate behavioral biases and preferences can vary significantly among individuals of the same genotype. Though individuality is a fundamental property of behavior, it is not currently understood how individual differences in brain structure and physiology produce idiosyncratic behaviors. Here we present evidence for idiosyncrasy in olfactory behavior and neural responses inDrosophila. We show that individual femaleDrosophilafrom a highly inbred laboratory strain exhibit idiosyncratic odor preferences that persist for days. We used in vivo calcium imaging of neural responses to compare projection neuron (second-order neurons that convey odor information from the sensory periphery to the central brain) responses to the same odors across animals. We found that, while odor responses appear grossly stereotyped, upon closer inspection, many individual differences are apparent across antennal lobe (AL) glomeruli (compact microcircuits corresponding to different odor channels). Moreover, we show that neuromodulation, environmental stress in the form of altered nutrition, and activity of certain AL local interneurons affect the magnitude of interfly behavioral variability. Taken together, this work demonstrates that individualDrosophilaexhibit idiosyncratic olfactory preferences and idiosyncratic neural responses to odors, and that behavioral idiosyncrasies are subject to neuromodulation and regulation by neurons in the AL.
Funder
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund
Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation
National Science Foundation
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
61 articles.
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