During the first half of the project, we have developed and applied methods to live observe developmental choices of individual neurons during the development of the intact fly brain. The key methodological approach has been intravital and ex vivo brain imaging using 2-photon microscopy. In order to live observe single neurons at the level of synapse formation during normal brain development, we have developed and used an increasing toolkit of cell-specific driver lines as well as reporter lines devised to stochastically and sparsely label neurons and their filopodial interactions. These tools and methods were applied to the developmental choices prior to the moment of choice (i.e. during developmental choices that restrict subsequently available partners), as well as at the moment of choice itself for more than 10 different neuron types so far.
Our first major result was recently published in the journal Science in March 2024 (PMID: doi: 10.1126/science.adk3043). Here, we applied our method of intravital live imaging of the filopodial interactions to six types of photoreceptor neurons and studied how these neurons pre-specify synaptic partnerships through a self-organization process. Remarkably, this developmental process does not require the target cells, yet ensures that the right pre- and postsynaptic neurons are sorted together prior to the time of synaptic partner choice. In this study, we combined live imaging with genetic manipulation (target cell ablation) and computational modeling to provide a comprehensive model for the developmental program that ensures the correct sorting of synaptic partners prior to the moment of choice. Here, the specificity of preceding development is in fact such, that only correct partners are available for synapse formation at the time and place when synapse formation occurs. Hence, this work supports the SynPromiscuity hypothesis and further suggests that genetically encoded synaptic specificity may develop without explicitly 'tagging' the pre- and post-synaptic partners, but instead through target-independent self-organization prior to synapse formation.
We have so far developed live imaging in the intact fly pupa or in ex vivo brain culture for a number of optic lobe interneurons, including L3, Mi1, M4, Dm4 and Dm8. The roles of the observed dynamics of these neurons for the developmental programs leading to synapse-specific brain wiring are ongoing.