Abstract

A ubiquitous feature of the nervous system is the processing of simultaneously arriving sensory inputs from different modalities. Yet, because of the difficulties of monitoring large populations of neurons with the single resolution required to determine their sensory responses, the cellular mechanisms of how populations of neurons encode different sensory modalities often remain enigmatic. We studied multimodal information encoding in a small sensorimotor system of the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system that drives rhythmic motor activity for the processing of food. This system is experimentally advantageous, as it produces a fictive behavioral output in vitro, and distinct sensory modalities can be selectively activated. It has the additional advantage that all sensory information is routed through a hub ganglion, the commissural ganglion, a structure with fewer than 220 neurons. Using optical imaging of a population of commissural neurons to track each individual neuron's response across sensory modalities, we provide evidence that multimodal information is encoded via a combinatorial code of recruited neurons. By selectively stimulating chemosensory and mechanosensory inputs that are functionally important for processing of food, we find that these two modalities were processed in a distributed network comprising the majority of commissural neurons imaged. In a total of 12 commissural ganglia, we show that 98% of all imaged neurons were involved in sensory processing, with the two modalities being processed by a highly overlapping set of neurons. Of these, 80% were multimodal, 18% were unimodal, and only 2% of the neurons did not respond to either modality. Differences between modalities were represented by the identities of the neurons participating in each sensory condition and by differences in response sign (excitation versus inhibition), with 46% changing their responses in the other modality. Consistent with the hypothesis that the commissural network encodes different sensory conditions in the combination of activated neurons, a new combination of excitation and inhibition was found when both pathways were activated simultaneously. The responses to this bimodal condition were distinct from either unimodal condition, and for 30% of the neurons, they were not predictive from the individual unimodal responses. Thus, in a sensorimotor network, different sensory modalities are encoded using a combinatorial code of neurons that are activated or inhibited. This provides motor networks with the ability to differentially respond to categorically different sensory conditions and may serve as a model to understand higher-level processing of multimodal information.

Highlights

  • Integrating information from multiple sensory modalities and producing appropriate motor outputs are vital functions of the nervous system, and the neural networks underlying these two functions are tightly linked in both vertebrates and invertebrates

  • A network of commissural neurons processes information from multiple sensory modalities The chemosensory (IV) and mechanosensory (VCN) pathways are known to modulate downstream motor patterns, and these effects are relayed through commissural ganglion (CoG) neurons [40,41,44]

  • There is evidence suggesting that projection neurons release neurotransmitter in the CoGs and act as local interneurons ([46]; Nusbaum, personal communication)

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Summary

Introduction

Integrating information from multiple sensory modalities and producing appropriate motor outputs are vital functions of the nervous system, and the neural networks underlying these two functions are tightly linked in both vertebrates and invertebrates. Responses to individual sensory modalities and their consequences for motor output in these downstream sensorimotor networks are often well characterized, little is known about the mechanisms by which multimodal information is encoded. Examples of premotor multisensory integration come from singleneuron studies in the superior colliculus [8,15,16,17,18], showing that multiple sensory modalities are processed in a distributed fashion throughout this brain stem region, with some neurons being exclusively unimodal and other being multimodal. Hypotheses of encoding of multimodal information include changes in neuronal firing rates (e.g., a rate code) [19], activation of distinct network components, or distinct activation and inhibition of neurons within a shared population (e.g., a combinatorial code) [20,21]

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