Receptors underlying an odorant's valence across concentrations in Drosophila Larvae

J Exp Biol. 2024 Mar 21:jeb.247215. doi: 10.1242/jeb.247215. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Odorants interact with receptors expressed in specialized olfactory neurons, and neurons of the same class send their axons to distinct glomeruli in the brain. The stereotypic spatial glomerular activity map generates recognition and behavioral response for the odorant. The valence of an odorant changes with concentration, typically becoming aversive at higher concentrations. Interestingly in the Drosophila larvae, the odorant (E)-2-hexenal is aversive at low concentrations and attractive at higher concentrations. We investigate the molecular and neural basis of this phenomenon focusing on how activities of different olfactory neurons conveying opposing effects dictate behaviors. We identify the repellant neuron in the larvae as one expressing the olfactory receptor Or7a, whose activation alone at low concentrations of (E)-2-hexenal elicits an avoidance response in an Or7a dependent manner. We demonstrate that avoidance can be overcome at higher concentrations by activation of additional neurons that are known to be attractive, most notably known activators of Or42a and Or85c. These findings suggest that in the larval stage, the attraction-conveying neurons can overcome the aversion-conveying channels for (E)-2-hexenal.

Keywords: Odorant receptor; aversion; drosophila; olfaction.