Mushroom Bodies Suppress Locomotor Activity in Drosophila melanogaster

  1. Jean-René Martin1,
  2. Roman Ernst, and
  3. Martin Heisenberg
  1. Lehrstuhl für Genetik, Biozentrum, D-97074 Würzburg, Germany

Abstract

Locomotor activity of single, freely walking flies in small tubes is analyzed in the time domain of several hours. To assess the influence of the mushroom bodies on walking activity, three independent noninvasive methods interfering with mushroom body function are applied: chemical ablation of the mushroom body precursor cells; a mutant affecting Kenyon cell differentiation (mushroom body miniature1 ); and the targeted expression of the catalytic subunit of tetanus toxin in subsets of Kenyon cells. All groups of flies with mushroom body defects show an elevated level of total walking activity. This increase is attributable to the slower and less complete attenuation of activity during the experiment. Walking activity in normal and mushroom body-deficient flies is clustered in active phases (bouts) and rest periods (pauses). Neither the initiation nor the internal structure, but solely the termination of bouts seems to be affected by the mushroom body defects. How this finding relates to the well-documented role of the mushroom bodies in olfactory learning and memory remains to be understood.

Footnotes

  • 1 Corresponding author.

    • Received January 26, 1998.
    • Accepted April 17, 1998.
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