Social facilitation of long-lasting memory is mediated by CO2 in Drosophila

Published: 10 February 2021| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/gnr8xws4cr.1
Contributors:
Aurélie Muria, Pierre-Yves Musso, Matthias Durrieu, Felipe Ramon Portugal, Brice Ronsin, Michael D. Gordon, Raphaël Jeanson, Guillaume Isabel

Description

How social interactions influence cognition is a fundamental question, yet rarely addressed at the neurobiological level. It is well established that the presence of conspecifics affects learning and memory performance, but the neural basis of this process has only recently begun to be investigated. In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the presence of other flies improves retrieval of a long-lasting olfactory memory. Here, we demonstrate that this is a composite memory comprised of two distinct elements. One is an individual memory that depends on outputs from the ’’ Kenyon cells (KCs) of the Mushroom Bodies (MBs), the memory center in the insect brain. The other is a group memory requiring output from the  KCs, a distinct sub-part of the MBs. We show that social facilitation of memory increases with group size and is triggered by CO2 released by group members. Among the different known neurons carrying CO2 information in the brain, we establish that the bilateral Ventral Projection Neuron (biVPN), which projects onto the MBs, is necessary for social facilitation. Moreover, we demonstrate that CO2-evoked memory engages a serotoninergic pathway involving the Dorsal-Paired Medial neurons (DPM), revealing a new role for this pair of serotonergic neurons. Overall, we identified both the sensorial cue and the neural circuit (biVPN>>DPM>) governing social facilitation of memory in flies. This study provides the demonstration that being in a group recruits the expression of a cryptic memory and that variations in CO2 concentration can affect cognitive processes in insects.

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Categories

Neurogenetics, Drosophila, Associative Memory, Carbon Dioxide, Calcium Imaging, Olfactory Cue

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