Locking of neuronal spikes to external and internal signals is a ubiquitous neurophysiological mechanism that has been extensively studied in several brain areas and species. Using experimental data from the electrosensory system and concise mathematical models, we analyze how a single neuron can simultaneously lock to multiple frequencies. Our findings demonstrate how temporal and rate codes can complement each other and lead to rich neuronal representations of sensory signals.
Optical imaging is a powerful tool to visualise and measure neuronal activity. However, due to the size and opacity of vertebrate brains it has until now been impossible to simultaneously image neuronal circuits at cellular resolution across the entire adult brain. This is true even for the smallest known vertebrate brain in the teleost Danionella, which is still too large for existing volumetric imaging approaches. Here we introduce image transfer oblique plane microscopy, which uses a new optical refocusing solution via a custom fibre-optical face-plate, enabling a large field-of-view of up to 4 mm3 at a volume rate of 1 Hz. We demonstrate the power of this method with the first brain-wide recording of neuronal activity in an adult vertebrate.
Locomotion exists in diverse forms in nature and is adapted to the environmental constraints of each species1. However, little is known about how closely related species with similar neuronal circuitry can evolve different navigational strategies to explore their environments. We established a powerful approach in comparative neuroethology to investigate evolution of neuronal circuits in vertebrates by comparing divergent swimming pattern of two closely related larval fish species, Danionella translucida (DT) and Danio rerio or zebrafish (ZF)2,3. During swimming, we demonstrate that DT utilizes lower half tail-beat frequency and amplitude to generate a slower and continuous swimming pattern when compared to the burst-and-glide swimming pattern in ZF. We found a high degree of conservation in the brain anatomy between the two species. However, we revealed that the activity of a higher motor region, referred here as the Mesencephalic Locomotion Maintenance Neurons (MLMN) correlates with the duration of swim events and differs strikingly between DT and ZF. Using holographic stimulation, we show that the activation of the MLMN is sufficient to increase the frequency and duration of swim events in ZF. Moreover, we propose two characteristics, availability of dissolved oxygen and timing of swim bladder inflation, which drive the observed differences in the swim pattern. Our findings uncover the neuronal circuit substrate underlying the evolutionary divergence of navigational strategies and how they are adapted to their respective environmental constraints.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.