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Review Article

Motor control of fly feeding

Pages 101-111 | Received 31 Jan 2016, Accepted 06 Apr 2016, Published online: 16 Jun 2016
 

Abstract

Following considerable progress on the molecular and cellular basis of taste perception in fly sensory neurons, the time is now ripe to explore how taste information, integrated with hunger and satiety, undergo a sensorimotor transformation to lead to the motor actions of feeding behavior. I examine what is known of feeding circuitry in adult flies from more than 250 years of work in larger flies and from newer work in Drosophila. I review the anatomy of the proboscis, its muscles and their functions (where known), its motor neurons, interneurons known to receive taste inputs, interneurons that diverge from taste circuitry to provide information to other circuits, interneurons from other circuits that converge on feeding circuits, proprioceptors that influence the motor control of feeding, and sites of integration of hunger and satiety on feeding circuits. In spite of the several neuron types now known, a connected pathway from taste inputs to feeding motor outputs has yet to be found. We are on the threshold of an era where these individual components will be assembled into circuits, revealing how nervous system architecture leads to the control of behavior.

Acknowledgements

The author is grateful for helpful feedback on the manuscript from Josh Lillvis, Kit Longden, Gabriella Sterne, Barry Dickson, and Kristin Scott.

Disclosure statement

The author reports no conflicts of interest.

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