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Evolutionary bestseller in image processing

Science Centric | 11 November 2010 12:14 GMT
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More Biology

The eye is not just a lens that takes pictures and converts them into electrical signals. As with all vertebrates, nerve cells in the human eye separate an image into different image channels once it has been projected onto the retina. This pre-sorted information is then transmitted to the brain as parallel image sequences. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried have now discovered that fruit flies process optical information in a similar way. The evidence suggests that this type of wiring is an effective energy-saving mechanism and is therefore deployed by a diverse range of animal species.

How does the mind perceive the world? This is not a trivial question: for many animal species, 'seeing' is one of the most important senses. Every second, the eyes record a huge number of impressions which are converted by the photoreceptor cells into electrical signals. In vertebrates, image processing begins in the retina of the eye. Here, the nerve cells separate out the visual information in images featuring different content before transmitting them to the brain.

To understand something as complex as 'seeing,' scientists examine a somewhat simpler but extremely efficient system - the fruit fly's brain. Despite their tiny size, fruit flies are ideal candidates for such research: they are masters of visual processing; the number of nerve cells involved is manageable, which means that each individual cell can be examined; and genetic tools make it possible to block individual cells and analyse their role in the system.

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology have now discovered surprising parallels in the neuronal processing of fruit flies and vertebrates. The fly also transmits images directly from the sensory cells to various image channels. The information is then transmitted via a series of other cells to large, motion-sensitive nerve cells. These output cells of the motion vision system are responsible for visual flight control.

Scientists ascertained the early separation into different images by blocking certain cells using genetic engineering. They then exposed the flies to moving striped patterns in an LED arena and recorded the electrical responses of the large output cells. The various contrast changes, which occur as a result of the stripe movement, are perceived by the eye's photoreceptors. However, five nerve cells - the lamina cells L1 to L5 - are located directly behind every sensory cell. 'We had been wondering for a long time why there are so many cells, which of them transmit information to the motion vision system, and what kind of information this is,' reports Alexander Borst, who headed up the study. His team suppressed the activity of individual lamina cells while the flies watched the moving patterns. The experiments revealed that L1 and L2 cells are the main input channels into the flies' motion vision system. It got exciting as the team discovered that the cells transmit only certain partial information: L1 only responds if a dark/bright edge passes by (light on), while L2 only transmits information about a moving bright/dark edge (light off). This represents a clear parallel with the eyes of vertebrates, where ON and OFF bipolar cells, as they are known, also respond only to specific contrast changes.

'It can be no coincidence that we find this separation of contrast information in all vertebrates and now also in flies,' surmises Alexander Borst. The neurobiologist already has a theory as to why this wiring has been maintained so consistently throughout evolution: it allows the brain to save energy. If only one cell relayed the information about the various contrast changes, it would have to maintain a basic membrane voltage, which would intensify in a 'light on' situation and weaken in a 'light off' situation. Such a basic membrane voltage requires energy. Having two cells is therefore more efficient, as only one needs to be active when 'its' contrast change occurs.

Source: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft


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