ePoster

VISCERAL SIGNALING OF POST-INGESTIVE MALAISE DIRECTS MEMORY UPDATING IN DROSOPHILA

Bhagyashree Senapatiand 2 co-authors

University of Oxford

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS01-07AM-297

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS01-07AM-297

Poster preview

VISCERAL SIGNALING OF POST-INGESTIVE MALAISE DIRECTS MEMORY UPDATING IN DROSOPHILA poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS01-07AM-297

Abstract

Consolidation is a time when labile memories transition to a stable form. Malaise learning in Drosophila reveals consolidation to also permit memory updating. Flies taught to associate one of two odors with toxin-tainted sugar initially express conditioned odor approach, that following consolidation switches to avoidance. Behavioral reversal emerges from dopaminergic update of parallel memories for the two trained odors. Differentia serotoninergic modulation of specific aversive and rewarding dopaminergic neuron subtypes permits post-ingestive intoxication to suppress consolidation of initial odor-sugar memory and simultaneously invert reward memory plasticity into "safety" memory for the odor experienced without food. Fat body release of the Toll-ligand activating protease modSP, and resilience factor Turandot A, instruct malaise updates by triggering autocrine Toll signaling in the same brain dopaminergic neurons that form and consolidate initial sugar memory. This neural mechanism overcomes the credit assignment problem of delayed postingestive reinforcement by updating earlier memories of the trained odors.

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