Published October 18, 2024 | Version v4
Dataset Open

Dataset for: Dopamine neurons that inform Drosophila olfactory memory have distinct, acute functions driving attraction and aversion

  • 1. Division of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, College of Health & Life Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Qatar
  • 2. Program in Neuroscience and Behavioural Disorders, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore
  • 3. Institute for Molecular and Cell Biology, A*STAR, Singapore

Description

The brain must guide immediate responses to beneficial and harmful stimuli while simultaneously writing memories for future reference. While both immediate actions and reinforcement learning are instructed by dopamine, how dopaminergic systems maintain coherence between these two reward functions is unknown. Through optogenetic activation experiments, we showed that the dopamine neurons that inform olfactory memory in Drosophila have a distinct, parallel function driving attraction and aversion (valence). Sensory neurons required for olfactory memory were dispensable to dopaminergic valence. A broadly projecting set of dopaminergic cells had valence that was dependent on dopamine, glutamate, and octopamine. Similarly, a more restricted dopaminergic cluster with attractive valence was reliant on dopamine and glutamate; flies avoided opto-inhibition of this narrow subset, indicating the role of this cluster in controlling ongoing behavior. Dopamine valence was distinct from output-neuron opto-valence in locomotor pattern, strength, and polarity. Overall our data suggest that dopamine’s acute effect on valence provides a mechanism by which a dopaminergic system can coherently write memories to influence future responses while guiding immediate attraction and aversion.

Files

Notebooks + Data.zip

Files (2.0 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c9f55dbcf5cf94dc6f9621ee4d1b1ede
5.1 kB Download
md5:16ed9afbddda995cdf7c90f40be033d1
2.0 GB Preview Download
md5:e58261240154266b91f825b547339264
693 Bytes Preview Download
md5:bdcd98059539735feb5160f0d075a447
42.9 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
Preprint: 10.1101/2022.11.23.517775 (DOI)