Anatomy of the giant fibre pathway inDrosophila. I. Three thoracic components of the pathway

SummaryActivity in the flight muscles and jump muscles inDrosophila can be stimulated by excitation of a pair of giant fibres that enter the thoracic ganglion from the brain. Contrary to previous descriptions, these giant fibres are not themselves motor axons. Each giant fibre contacts both a large motor axon and an interneuron. The motor axon innervates the ipsilateral tergotrochanteral (jump) muscle. The interneuron synapses in turn with the motor neurons that innervate the contralateral dorsal longitudinal flight muscle. The output synapses of this interneuron occur directly onto the motor axons within a peripheral nerve. The unusual peripheral location for these interneuron synapses suggests that the interneuron may function to speed up activation of the motor axons by bypassing integration within the motor neurons' dendritic trees. The synapses are typical dipteran chemical synapses, with occasional reciprocal contacts from the motor axons back onto the interneuron. The interneuron-motor axon synapses may be especially useful for morphological studies of identified synaptic contacts because their peripheral location makes them extremely easy to locate and identify.

[1]  Boschek Cb On the fine structure of the peripheral retina and lamina ganglionaris of the fly, Musca domestica. , 1971 .

[2]  S. Buchner,et al.  Preliminary Investigations on a Pair of Giant Fibers in the Central Nervous System of Dipteran Flies , 1973 .

[3]  R. Wyman,et al.  Motor outputs of giant nerve fiber in Drosophila. , 1980, Journal of neurophysiology.

[4]  R. Foelix Occurrence of synapses in peripheral sensory nerves of arachnids , 1975, Nature.

[5]  O. Trujillo-Cenóz,et al.  Some aspects of the structural organization of the medulla in muscoid flies. , 1969, Journal of ultrastructure research.

[6]  Y. Toh,et al.  Synaptic organization of the fleshfly ocellus , 1975, Journal of neurocytology.

[7]  Nicholas J. Strausfeld,et al.  Neuroarchitectures Serving Compound Eyes of Crustacea and Insects , 1981 .

[8]  J. C. Coggshall Neurons associated with the dorsal longitudinal flight muscles ofDrosophila melanogaster , 1978, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[9]  O. Trujillo-Cenóz Some aspects of the structural organization of the intermediate retina of dipterans. , 1965, Journal of ultrastructure research.

[10]  K. Ikeda,et al.  Organization of identified axons innervating the dorsal longitudinal flight muscle ofDrosophila melanogaster , 1980, Journal of neurocytology.

[11]  D. Troyer,et al.  Giant neurons and associated synapses in the peripheral nervous system of whip spiders , 1980, Journal of neurocytology.

[12]  N. Strausfeld Atlas of an Insect Brain , 1976, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

[13]  M. E. Power The thoracico‐abdominal nervous system of an adult insect, Drosophila melanogaster , 1948, The Journal of comparative neurology.