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http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/58235/title/Mapping_the_fruit_fly_brain

Mapping the fruit fly brain
New digital atlas demystifies complex neuron shapes and connections

By Laura Sanders
Web edition : Monday, April 12th, 2010

WASHINGTON - A new computer-based technique is exploring uncharted territory
in the fruit fly brain with cell-by-cell detail that can be built into
networks for a detailed look at how neurons work together. The research may
ultimately lead to a complete master plan of the entire fly brain. Mapping
the estimated 100,000 neurons in a fly brain, and seeing how they interact
to control behavior, will be a powerful tool for figuring out how the
billions of neurons in the human brain work.

The program has already found some new features of the fruit fly brain, said
study coauthor Hanchuan Peng of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's
Janelia Farm Research Campus in Ashburn, Va. "We can see very beautiful and
very complicated patterns," said Peng, who presented the results April 9 at
the 51st Annual Drosophila Research Conference. "If you look at neurons at a
better resolution, or look at regions you've never looked at before, you'll
find something new."

Peng and his colleagues developed a method, also described in the April
Nature Biotechnology, which incorporates many different images of fruit fly
brains. The brains come from flies that were genetically programmed so that
select neurons glow when struck with a particular type of laser light. By
combining thousands of these digital images from different flies, the
researchers can create maps of how these different neuronal populations fit
together. The full map of the fly brain isn't yet complete, but it will grow
as more images are added.

These kinds of large-scale studies that focus on how neurons are connected
are "very important for the future," commented geneticist Wei Xie of
Southeast University in Nanjing, China. Understanding how all of the neurons
work together is much more meaningful than studying how a single brain cell
connects to another cell, Xie said. "Just a neuron is not enough."

"What we want to do in the next few years is to add more and more neuron
reconstructions into this map," Peng said. He likened the process to a
Google Earth resource. "If you think about the fruit fly brain as the Earth,
the little neurons will be the streets. We want to map a lot of neuron
streets onto the Earth," he said.

Peng and his colleagues have started combing their preliminary brain map for
interesting features and comparing different flies' brains to one another.
For the most part, patterns of neuron-connecting pathways don't vary much
from brain to brain, the researchers found.

On the other hand, the shapes of cells in the same brain structure can
differ dramatically. For example, the variety of shapes found in the neurons
of a wheel-shaped brain structure called the ellipsoid body "are just
amazing," Peng says. In the same fly, some of the cells spread inside the
ring, while others point outward in a complex lock-and-key arrangement.

The results are preliminary, but finding such unexpected variation could
mean that these neurons - which were thought to be nearly carbon copies of
each other - have important functional differences.






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