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Authors & Affiliations
Amalia Braun, Alexander Borst, Matthias Meier
Abstract
The circuitry underlying the detection of visual motion in Drosophila melanogaster is one of the best studied
networks in neuroscience. Lately, electron microscopy reconstructions, algorithmic models, and functional
studies have proposed a common motif for the cellular circuitry of an elementary motion detector based on
both supralinear enhancement for preferred direction and sublinear suppression for null-direction motion. In
T5 cells, however, all columnar input neurons (Tm1, Tm2, Tm4, and Tm9) are excitatory. So, how is null-direction suppression realized there? Using two-photon calcium imaging in combination with thermogenetics,
optogenetics, apoptotics, and pharmacology, we discovered that it is via CT1, the GABAergic large-field
amacrine cell, where the different processes have previously been shown to act in an electrically isolated
way. Within each column, CT1 receives excitatory input from Tm9 and Tm1 and provides the sign-inverted,
now inhibitory input signal onto T5. Ablating CT1 or knocking down GABA-receptor subunit Rdl significantly
broadened the directional tuning of T5 cells. It thus appears that the signal of Tm1 and Tm9 is used both as an
excitatory input for preferred direction enhancement and, through a sign inversion within the Tm1/Tm9-CT1
microcircuit, as an inhibitory input for null-direction suppression.