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A Connectome of the Adult Drosophila Central Brain

Authors :
Audrey Francis
Ting Zhao
Feng Li
Megan Sammons
Madelaine K Robertson
SungJin Kim
Tyler Paterson
Philipp Schlegel
Chelsea X Alvarado
Viren Jain
Brandon S Canino
Omotara Ogundeyi
Nora Forknall
Dagmar Kainmueller
Tansy Yang
Natasha Cheatham
Neha Rampally
Caitlin Ribeiro
Kimothy L. Smith
Emily M Phillips
Ruchi Parekh
Jackie Swift
Donald J. Olbris
Takashi Kawase
Jon Thomson Rymer
Zhiyuan Lu
Nicholas Padilla
Christopher Ordish
Dorota Tarnogorska
Nicole Neubarth
Aya Shinomiya
Miatta Ndama
Samantha Finley
Stuart Berg
Erika Neace
Bryon Eubanks
John A. Bogovic
David G. Ackerman
Robert Svirskas
Sari McLin
Emily A Manley
Jane Anne Horne
Michael A Cook
Samantha Ballinger
Michał Januszewski
Jeremy Maitin-Shepard
Caroline Mooney
Nicole A Kirk
Shin-ya Takemura
Iris Talebi
Temour Tokhi
Kei K. Ito
Khaled Khairy
Stephen M. Plaza
Julie Kovalyak
Patricia K. Rivlin
Emily M Joyce
Kelli Fairbanks
Philip M Hubbard
Charli Maldonado
Nneoma Okeoma
Hideo Otsuna
Laurence F. Lindsey
Tim Blakely
Gerald M. Rubin
Alanna Lohff
William T. Katz
Anne K Scott
Mutsumi Ito
Peter H. Li
Ian A. Meinertzhagen
Natalie L Smith
Gary B. Huang
Dennis A Bailey
Reed A. George
Kenneth J. Hayworth
Tom Dolafi
Marisa Dreher
Tanya Wolff
Kazunori Shinomiya
Harald F. Hess
E.T. Troutman
Christopher J Knecht
Gary Patrick Hopkins
Alia Suleiman
Vivek Jayaraman
Emily Tenshaw
Octave Duclos
John J. Walsh
Stephan Saalfeld
Louis K. Scheffer
Elliott E Phillips
Lowell Umayam
Jens Goldammer
Sobeski
Jody Clements
Ashley L Scott
Shirley Lauchie
Sean M Ryan
Christopher Patrick
Jolanta A. Borycz
Claire Smith
C.S. Xu
Laramie Leavitt
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

The neural circuits responsible for behavior remain largely unknown. Previous efforts have reconstructed the complete circuits of small animals, with hundreds of neurons, and selected circuits for larger animals. Here we (the FlyEM project at Janelia and collaborators at Google) summarize new methods and present the complete circuitry of a large fraction of the brain of a much more complex animal, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Improved methods include new procedures to prepare, image, align, segment, find synapses, and proofread such large data sets; new methods that define cell types based on connectivity in addition to morphology; and new methods to simplify access to a large and evolving data set. From the resulting data we derive a better definition of computational compartments and their connections; an exhaustive atlas of cell examples and types, many of them novel; detailed circuits for most of the central brain; and exploration of the statistics and structure of different brain compartments, and the brain as a whole. We make the data public, with a web site and resources specifically designed to make it easy to explore, for all levels of expertise from the expert to the merely curious. The public availability of these data, and the simplified means to access it, dramatically reduces the effort needed to answer typical circuit questions, such as the identity of upstream and downstream neural partners, the circuitry of brain regions, and to link the neurons defined by our analysis with genetic reagents that can be used to study their functions.Note: In the next few weeks, we will release a series of papers with more involved discussions. One paper will detail the hemibrain reconstruction with more extensive analysis and interpretation made possible by this dense connectome. Another paper will explore the central complex, a brain region involved in navigation, motor control, and sleep. A final paper will present insights from the mushroom body, a center of multimodal associative learning in the fly brain.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....84687988e7b76f75fe231229b8a9b7d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.21.911859