Summary: Researchers report the way the brain processes sensory input information depends on whether an animal lacks specific nutrients or is pregnant. The findings provide valuable new insight on the neural basis for behavior both within and beyond food choices.
Source: Champalimaud Center for the Unknown
Lets face it. As enticing as the idea of starting lunch with a chocolate cake might be, few would actually make that choice when it comes down to it. And yet, at the end of the meal, many would reach for that same cake without hesitation.
The cause behind this phenomenon is the bodys ever-changing internal states: by lunchtime, the body often needs protein, so the brain promotes that particular food choice. However, after the protein was ingested, carbs might be a nice extra for padding the bodys fat stores.
But internal states are rarely one-dimensional. An individual might be lacking several nutrients simultaneously (such as protein and salt), and also be pregnant, a state that carries its own host of needs. How does the brain sum up these parallel internal states to guide behavior?
A study published today (July 6th) inNatureprovides novel insight into this complex problem. We show that the way the brain processessensory inputdepends on whether animals lack specific nutrients or are pregnant, said the studys senior author Carlos Ribeiro, a principal investigator at the Champalimaud Foundation in Portugal.
Through this work, we identified a general principle by which internal states are integrated to shape brain function and decision-making. In addition, the new microscopy strategy we developed in this study may prove valuable for understanding the neural basis of behavior both within and beyond food choice.
Venturing into uncharted neural territory
To investigate how internal states shape behavior, Ribeiros team focused on a relatively poorly understood region of the fruit-fly brain called SEZ (the subesophageal zone). This region is thought to play a crucial role in food choice because it receives the majority of taste inputs and houses themotor neuronsthat control feeding. However, since this region mainly consists of densely tangled neural fibers, its anatomical sub-structure was not well-defined.
To understand how it operates, the team decided to create a functional atlas of the SEZ. In other words, they set out to identify the sub-structures that make up this region and attribute specific functions to each. To that end, Daniel Mnch, the studys lead author, first expressed a fluorescent activity reporter in all neurons in thefly brain. He then performed advanced 3D neuroimaging in four groups of flies, each representing distinct internal states.
We wanted to understand how two powerful protein-appetite modulatorsprotein deprivation and reproductive statusinteract in the brain. We, therefore, defined four experimental groups: fully-fed virgins, protein-deprived virgins, fully-fed mated flies, and protein-deprived mated flies. We recorded neural activity in the SEZ while the flies tasted sucrose, water and yeast (the flys natural protein source), Mnch explained.
An appetite map
The atlas the team created consists of 81 regions spanning the entire SEZ. These regions correspond to the majority of the SEZs previously described sensory and motor areas, and also include new, previously unidentified regions.
Our atlas captured some known regions. For example one shaped like a banana, which receives input from taste neurons that are located in the proboscis (the flys mouth), said Mnch.
We also discovered a winged-shaped area we named the Borboleta region (the Portuguese word for butterfly) in the back part of SEZ. This region later turned out to play a key role in driving protein appetite.
Beyond identifying new regions, the atlas also revealed the effect of internal state on neural activity, pinpointing the Borboleta region as a protein-appetite driver. Responses to water and sucrose hardly changed across the four groups. However, protein-rich food had a striking effect.
Protein-rich food evoked activity was strongly increased across large parts of the SEZ in protein-deprived animals. Mating however, mostly affected activity in the SEZs motor regions.
This was somewhat surprising, as mating and protein deprivation are both known to increase protein appetite, and so we didnt expect to find such different response patterns, Mnch said.
They also witnessed the synergistic effect that combined internal states have on neural activity. Mated, protein-deprived females had the highest activity in the SEZs motor regions, Mnch explained.
This means that even though this pair of co-existing internal states protein-deprivation and pregnancyare processed across distinct neural circuits, they end up converging at the same area to promote protein appetite.
Manipulating neurons to induce protein cravings
The team identified new regions in the SEZ and witnessed how different tastes and internal states influence neural activity in these regions. But how could they know whether these areas are actually involved in driving food preference?
Thats when we turned to our newly-discovered borboleta region, where protein taste evoked robust neural activity, said Mnch. We reasoned that if it is truly involved in this behavior, we could influence protein appetite by artificially activating neurons in this region.
The team aligned the atlas they created with another pre-existing atlas that maps the innervation patterns of groups of neurons. They then selected neurons in the borboleta region and activated them in fully-fed flies, who normally prefer sucrose over protein. This manipulation resulted in a marked increase in protein appetite.
We felt that we had come full circle: from observation to function, Mnch recalled.
First, we observed food preference in the four groups of flies, noting that protein-deprived and mated flies have a high preference forprotein. Then, we imagedneural activityin the SEZ, created the atlas, and identified new regions. Finally, we confirmed that one of these regions is involved in generating the behavior we had initially observed by manipulating its activity.
Overall, our approach allows for identifying and linking neurons to specific behaviors, relating to food choice and potentially others as well, Ribeiro added.
It would be difficult to implement our approach in any other system than in fruit-flies. The tools we have nowadays make the fruit fly an amazing experimental system that enables us to dissect how the brain functions. Importantly, the SEZ is similar to the vertebrate brainstem.
Our results, therefore, have broad implications for neuroscience. They may also inspire future studies aimed at bridging brain-wide activity mapping with functional circuit dissections. These are exciting times to be a neuroscientist, he concluded.
Author: Press OfficeSource: Champalimaud Center for the UnknownContact: Press Office Champalimaud Center for the UnknownImage: The image is credited to Ribeiro lab, Champalimaud Foundation
Original Research: Closed access.The neuronal logic of how internal states control food choice by Carlos Ribeiro et al. Nature
Abstract
The neuronal logic of how internal states control food choice
When deciding what to eat, animals evaluate sensory information about food quality alongside multiple ongoing internal state
How internal states interact to alter sensorimotor processing and shape decisions such as food choice remains poorly understood. Here we use pan-neuronal volumetric activity imaging in the brain ofDrosophilamelanogasterto investigate the neuronal basis of internal state-dependent nutrient appetites.
We created a functional atlas of the ventral fly brain and find that metabolic state shapes sensorimotor processing across large sections of the neuropil. By contrast, reproductive state acts locally to define how sensory information is translated into feeding motor output. These two states thus synergistically modulate protein-specific food intake and food choice.
Finally, using a novel computational strategy, we identify driver lines that label neurons innervating state-modulated brain regions and show that the newly identified borboleta region is sufficient to direct food choice towards protein-rich food.
We thus identify a generalizable principle by which distinct internal states are integrated to shape decision making and propose a strategy to uncover and functionally validate how internal states shape behaviour.
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