Abstract
AbstractThe ability to generate diverse patterns of behavior is advantageous for animal survival. However, it is still unclear how interneurons in a single nervous system are organized to exhibit distinct motions by coordinating the same set of motor neurons. In this study, we analyze the populational dynamics of synaptic activity when fly larvae exhibit two distinct fictive locomotion, forward and backward waves. Based on neurotransmitter phenotypes, the hemi-neuromere is demarcated into ten domains. Calcium imaging analysis shows that one pair of the domains exhibits a consistent recruitment order in synaptic activity in forward and backward waves, while most other domains show the opposite orders in the distinct fictive locomotion. Connectomics-based mapping indicates that these two domains contain pre- and post-synaptic terminals of interneurons involved in motor control. These results suggest that the identified domains serve as a convergence region of forward and backward crawling programs.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory