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      Fly Photoreceptors Demonstrate Energy-Information Trade-Offs in Neural Coding

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      1 , ¤ , 2 , 1 , *
      PLoS Biology
      Public Library of Science

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          Abstract

          Trade-offs between energy consumption and neuronal performance must shape the design and evolution of nervous systems, but we lack empirical data showing how neuronal energy costs vary according to performance. Using intracellular recordings from the intact retinas of four flies, Drosophila melanogaster, D. virilis, Calliphora vicina, and Sarcophaga carnaria, we measured the rates at which homologous R1–6 photoreceptors of these species transmit information from the same stimuli and estimated the energy they consumed. In all species, both information rate and energy consumption increase with light intensity. Energy consumption rises from a baseline, the energy required to maintain the dark resting potential. This substantial fixed cost, ∼20% of a photoreceptor's maximum consumption, causes the unit cost of information (ATP molecules hydrolysed per bit) to fall as information rate increases. The highest information rates, achieved at bright daylight levels, differed according to species, from ∼200 bits s −1 in D. melanogaster to ∼1,000 bits s −1 in S. carnaria. Comparing species, the fixed cost, the total cost of signalling, and the unit cost (cost per bit) all increase with a photoreceptor's highest information rate to make information more expensive in higher performance cells. This law of diminishing returns promotes the evolution of economical structures by severely penalising overcapacity. Similar relationships could influence the function and design of many neurons because they are subject to similar biophysical constraints on information throughput.

          Author Summary

          Many animals show striking reductions or enlargements of sense organs or brain regions according to their lifestyle and habitat. For example, cave dwelling or subterranean animals often have reduced eyes and brain regions involved in visual processing. These differences suggest that although there are benefits to possessing a particular sense organ or brain region, there are also significant costs that shape the evolution of the nervous system, but little is known about this trade-off, particularly at the level of single neurons. We measured the trade-off between performance and energetic costs by recording electrical signals from single photoreceptors in different fly species. We discovered that photoreceptors in the blowfly transmit five times more information than the smaller photoreceptors of the diminutive fruit fly Drosophila. The blowfly pays a high price for better performance; its photoreceptor uses ten times more energy to code the same quantity of information. We conclude that, for basic biophysical reasons, neuronal energy consumption increases much more steeply than performance, and this intensifies the evolutionary pressure to reduce performance to the minimum required for adequate function. Thus the biophysical properties of sensory neurons help to explain why the sense organs and brains of different species vary in size and performance.

          Abstract

          Evidence from single-neuron recordings supports the law of diminishing returns, i.e., high performance eyes in larger, faster flies have less efficient photoreceptors than those of their small, sluggish counterparts.

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          Brains perform with remarkable efficiency, are capable of prodigious computation, and are marvels of communication. We are beginning to understand some of the geometric, biophysical, and energy constraints that have governed the evolution of cortical networks. To operate efficiently within these constraints, nature has optimized the structure and function of cortical networks with design principles similar to those used in electronic networks. The brain also exploits the adaptability of biological systems to reconfigure in response to changing needs.
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              Cortical rewiring and information storage.

              Current thinking about long-term memory in the cortex is focused on changes in the strengths of connections between neurons. But ongoing structural plasticity in the adult brain, including synapse formation/elimination and remodelling of axons and dendrites, suggests that memory could also depend on learning-induced changes in the cortical 'wiring diagram'. Given that the cortex is sparsely connected, wiring plasticity could provide a substantial boost in storage capacity, although at a cost of more elaborate biological machinery and slower learning.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                PLoS Biol
                pbio
                PLoS Biology
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1544-9173
                1545-7885
                April 2007
                20 March 2007
                : 5
                : 4
                : e116
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
                [2 ] Biology and Environmental Science, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom
                Harvard University, United States of America
                Author notes
                * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: s.laughlin@ 123456zoo.cam.ac.uk
                Article
                06-PLBI-RA-0731R2 plbi-05-04-14
                10.1371/journal.pbio.0050116
                1828148
                17373859
                dcc72931-3f94-4391-a7d6-f2f89bc6e5d9
                Copyright: © 2007 Niven et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 2 May 2006
                : 2 February 2007
                Page count
                Pages: 13
                Categories
                Research Article
                Biophysics
                Computational Biology
                Evolutionary Biology
                Neuroscience
                Neuroscience
                Physiology
                Drosophila
                Custom metadata
                Niven JE, Anderson JC, Laughlin SB (2007) Fly photoreceptors demonstrate energy-information trade-offs in neural coding. PLoS Biol 5(4): e116. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050116

                Life sciences
                Life sciences

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