Escape response latency in the Giant Fiber System of Drosophila melanogastor (Augustin et al 2019)


"The Giant Fiber System (GFS) is a multi-component neuronal pathway mediating rapid escape response in the adult fruit-fly Drosophila melanogaster, usually in the face of a threatening visual stimulus. Two branches of the circuit promote the response by stimulating an escape jump followed by flight initiation. Our recent work demonstrated an age-associated decline in the speed of signal propagation through the circuit, measured as the stimulus-to-muscle depolarization response latency. The decline is likely due to the diminishing number of inter-neuronal gap junctions in the GFS of ageing flies. In this work, we presented a realistic conductance-based, computational model of the GFS that recapitulates our experimental results and identifies some of the critical anatomical and physiological components governing the circuit's response latency. According to our model, anatomical properties of the GFS neurons have a stronger impact on the transmission than neuronal membrane conductance densities. The model provides testable predictions for the effect of experimental interventions on the circuit's performance in young and ageing flies."

Model Type: Realistic Network

Region(s) or Organism(s): Drosophila

Currents: I Na,t; I Na,p; I K

Model Concept(s): Invertebrate; Delay

Simulation Environment: NEURON

Implementer(s): Zylbertal, Asaph [asaph.zylbertal at mail.huji.ac.il]; Augustin, Hrvoje

References:

Augustin H, Zylbertal A, Partridge L. (2019). A computational model of the escape response latency in the Giant Fiber System of Drosophila melanogaster eNeuro.


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