Long-timescale anti-directional rotation in Drosophila optomotor behavior

Author:

Mano Omer1ORCID,Choi Minseung2ORCID,Tanaka Ryosuke3,Creamer Matthew S3,Matos Natalia CB3,Shomar Joseph W4ORCID,Badwan Bara A5,Clandinin Thomas R2ORCID,Clark Damon A1346ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, Yale University

2. Department of Neurobiology, Stanford University

3. Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Yale University

4. Department of Physics, Yale University

5. Department of Chemical Engineering, Yale University

6. Department of Neuroscience, Yale University

Abstract

Locomotor movements cause visual images to be displaced across the eye, a retinal slip that is counteracted by stabilizing reflexes in many animals. In insects, optomotor turning causes the animal to turn in the direction of rotating visual stimuli, thereby reducing retinal slip and stabilizing trajectories through the world. This behavior has formed the basis for extensive dissections of motion vision. Here, we report that under certain stimulus conditions, two Drosophila species, including the widely studied Drosophila melanogaster, can suppress and even reverse the optomotor turning response over several seconds. Such ‘anti-directional turning’ is most strongly evoked by long-lasting, high-contrast, slow-moving visual stimuli that are distinct from those that promote syn-directional optomotor turning. Anti-directional turning, like the syn-directional optomotor response, requires the local motion detecting neurons T4 and T5. A subset of lobula plate tangential cells, CH cells, show involvement in these responses. Imaging from a variety of direction-selective cells in the lobula plate shows no evidence of dynamics that match the behavior, suggesting that the observed inversion in turning direction emerges downstream of the lobula plate. Further, anti-directional turning declines with age and exposure to light. These results show that Drosophila optomotor turning behaviors contain rich, stimulus-dependent dynamics that are inconsistent with simple reflexive stabilization responses.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative

National Defense Science & Engineering Graduate

Stanford University

Takenaka Foundation

National Science Foundation

CAPES Foundation

Ford Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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