Person: Wilson, Rachel
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Publication Leg-tracking and automated behavioural classification in Drosophila
(Nature Pub. Group, 2013) Kain, Jamey; Stokes, Chris; Gaudry, Quentin; Song, Xiangzhi; Foley, James; Wilson, Rachel; de Bivort, BenjaminMuch remains unknown about how the nervous system of an animal generates behaviour, and even less is known about the evolution of behaviour. How does evolution alter existing behaviours or invent novel ones? Progress in computational techniques and equipment will allow these broad, complex questions to be explored in great detail. Here we present a method for tracking each leg of a fruit fly behaving spontaneously upon a trackball, in real time. Legs were tracked with infrared-fluorescent dyes invisible to the fly, and compatible with two-photon microscopy and controlled visual stimuli. We developed machine-learning classifiers to identify instances of numerous behavioural features (for example, walking, turning and grooming), thus producing the highest-resolution ethological profiles for individual flies.
Publication Asymmetric neurotransmitter release enables rapid odor lateralization in Drosophila
(2012) Gaudry, Quentin; Hong, Elizabeth J.; Kain, Jamey; de Bivort, Benjamin; Wilson, RachelIn Drosophila, most individual olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) project bilaterally to both sides of the brain1,2. Having bilateral rather than unilateral projections may represent a useful redundancy. However, bilateral ORN projections to the brain should also compromise the ability to lateralize odors. Nevertheless, walking or flying Drosophila reportedly turn toward their more strongly stimulated antenna3-5. Here we show that each ORN spike releases ~40% more neurotransmitter from the axon branch ipsilateral to the soma, as compared to the contralateral branch. As a result, when an odor activates the antennae asymmetrically, ipsilateral central neurons begin to spike a few milliseconds before contralateral neurons, and ipsilateral central neurons also fire at a 30-50% higher rate. We show that a walking fly can detect a 5% asymmetry in total ORN input to its left and right antennal lobes, and can turn toward the odor in less time than it requires the fly to complete a stride. These results demonstrate that neurotransmitter release properties can be tuned independently at output synapses formed by a single axon onto two target cells with identical functions and morphologies. Our data also show that small differences in spike timing and spike rate can produce reliable differences in olfactory behavior.
Publication Synaptic and circuit mechanisms promoting broadband transmission of olfactory stimulus dynamics
(2014) Nagel, Katherine I.; Hong, Elizabeth J.; Wilson, RachelSensory stimuli fluctuate on many timescales. However, short-term plasticity causes synapses to act as temporal filters, limiting the range of frequencies they can transmit. How synapses in vivo might transmit a range of frequencies in spite of short-term plasticity is poorly understood. The first synapse in the Drosophila olfactory system exhibits short-term depression, and yet can transmit broadband signals. Here we describe two mechanisms that broaden the frequency characteristics of this synapse. First, two distinct excitatory postsynaptic currents transmit signals on different timescales. Second, presynaptic inhibition dynamically updates synaptic properties to promote accurate transmission of signals across a wide range of frequencies. Inhibition is transient but grows slowly, and simulations show that these two features of inhibition promote broadband synaptic transmission. Dynamic inhibition is often thought to restrict the temporal patterns that a neuron responds to, but our results illustrate a different idea: inhibition can expand the bandwidth of neural coding.
Publication Wiring variations that enable and constrain neural computation in a sensory microcircuit
(eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd, 2017) Tobin, William F; Wilson, Rachel; Lee, Wei-Chung AllenNeural network function can be shaped by varying the strength of synaptic connections. One way to achieve this is to vary connection structure. To investigate how structural variation among synaptic connections might affect neural computation, we examined primary afferent connections in the Drosophila olfactory system. We used large-scale serial section electron microscopy to reconstruct all the olfactory receptor neuron (ORN) axons that target a left-right pair of glomeruli, as well as all the projection neurons (PNs) postsynaptic to these ORNs. We found three variations in ORN→PN connectivity. First, we found a systematic co-variation in synapse number and PN dendrite size, suggesting total synaptic conductance is tuned to postsynaptic excitability. Second, we discovered that PNs receive more synapses from ipsilateral than contralateral ORNs, providing a structural basis for odor lateralization behavior. Finally, we found evidence of imprecision in ORN→PN connections that can diminish network performance. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.24838.001
Publication Sensorimotor Experience Remaps Visual Input to a Heading-Direction Network
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019-11-20) Lu, Jenny; Fisher, Yvette; D’Alessandro, Isabel; Wilson, RachelWe can maintain some sense of direction in the dark by keeping track of our own movements, but when visual landmarks are available, our sense of direction is more accurate and stable. Moreover, we can learn new landmarks in new environments. What mechanisms reconcile self-movement information with ever-changing landmarks to generate a coherent sense of direction? Using whole-cell recordings and calcium imaging from Drosophila heading neurons, we show that each heading neuron is inhibited by visual cues in specific horizontal positions, with different visual maps in different individuals. Inhibition arises from presynaptic axons that form an all-to-all matrix of potential connections onto heading neurons. Visual input to the heading network can reorganize over minutes when visuo-motor correlations change, causing persistent changes in the brain’s heading map. Plasticity of sensory inputs, when combined with network attractor dynamics, should allow the brain’s spatial maps to incorporate sensory cues in new environments.