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Neural Correlates of Odor Learning in the Presynaptic Microglomerular Circuitry in the Honeybee Mushroom Body Calyx

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2018

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Society for Neuroscience
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Haenicke, Joachim, Nobuhiro Yamagata, Hanna Zwaka, Martin Nawrot, and Randolf Menzel. 2018. “Neural Correlates of Odor Learning in the Presynaptic Microglomerular Circuitry in the Honeybee Mushroom Body Calyx.” eNeuro 5 (3): ENEURO.0128-18.2018. doi:10.1523/ENEURO.0128-18.2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0128-18.2018.

Abstract

Abstract The mushroom body (MB) in insects is known as a major center for associative learning and memory, although exact locations for the correlating memory traces remain to be elucidated. Here, we asked whether presynaptic boutons of olfactory projection neurons (PNs) in the main input site of the MB undergo neuronal plasticity during classical odor-reward conditioning and correlate with the conditioned behavior. We simultaneously measured Ca2+ responses in the boutons and conditioned behavioral responses to learned odors in honeybees. We found that the absolute amount of the neural change for the rewarded but not for the unrewarded odor was correlated with the behavioral learning rate across individuals. The temporal profile of the induced changes matched with odor response dynamics of the MB-associated inhibitory neurons, suggestive of activity modulation of boutons by this neural class. We hypothesize the circuit-specific neural plasticity relates to the learned value of the stimulus and underlies the conditioned behavior of the bees.

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Cognition and Behavior, calcium imaging, honeybee, learning and memory, mushroom body, projection neurons

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