Repellent olfactory cues influence the optomotor response modulation in Drosophila melanogaster
Menti, G. M.; Bruzzone, M.; Zerbinati, S.; Zordan, M. A.; Visentin, P.; Drago, A.; Dal Maschio, M.; Megighian, A.
Show abstract
Animals need to precisely perceive and integrate the environmental cues to orient and select the appropriate motor responses required for navigating. This is the case, for instance, of the optokinetic reflex (OKR) and the optomotor response (OMR) in Drosophila melanogaster, where optic flow stimulation modulates the head or the body and legs motor activity respectively. Despite large bodies of literature on both the OKR and the OMR, there is still a limited understanding, in flies, of the impact on these responses of concomitant, and potentially conflicting, sensory inputs. To investigate this aspect, we used fruit flies walking on a sphere, presented with optic flow stimulation leading to the OMR together with the simultaneous exposure to olfactory stimulation, either using established repellent or masking compounds. We analysed the effect of different substances, and of their concentration, on the dynamics of the flies response to moving gratings, evaluating the fly walking path as well as average speed and duration. This analysis revealed several alterations between the compounds tested, in agreement with reported data on the simpler OKR. In conclusion, we show that concomitant exposure to repellents and maskers may consistently affect fundamental processes (the OKR and OMR) available to insects for informing themselves while navigating through the environment.
Matching journals
The top 1 journal accounts for 50% of the predicted probability mass.