PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Tihana Jovanic AU - James W. Truman AU - Marc Gershow AU - Marta Zlatic TI - Neural substrates of navigational decision-making in <em>Drosophila</em> larva anemotaxis AID - 10.1101/244608 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 244608 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/02/02/244608.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/02/02/244608.full AB - Small animals use sensory information to navigate their environment in order to reach more favorable conditions. in gradients of light, temperature, odors and CO2, Drosophila larvae alternate periods of runs and turns, regulating the frequency size and direction of turns, to move in a favorable direction. Whether larvae use the same strategies when navigating in response to somatosensory input is unknown. Further, while many of the sensory neurons that mediate navigation behaviors have been described, where and how these navigational strategies are implemented in the central nervous system and controlled by neuronal circuit elements is not well known. Here we characterize for the first time the navigational strategies of Drosophila larvae in gradients of air-current speeds using high-throughput behavioral assays and quantitative behavioral analysis. We find that larvae extend runs towards favorable directions and shorten runs in unfavorable directions, and that larvae regulate both the direction and amplitudes of turns. These results suggest similar central decision-making mechanisms underlie navigation behaviors in somatosensory and other sensory modalities. By silencing the activity of individual neurons and very sparse expression patterns (2 or 3 neuron types), we further identify the sensory neurons and circuit elements in the ventral nerve cord and brain of the larva required for navigational decisions during anemotaxis. The phenotypes of these central neurons are consistent with a mechanism where the increase of the turning rate in unfavorable conditions and decrease in turning rate in favorable conditions are independently controlled. In addition, we find phenotypes that suggest that the decisions of whether and which way to turn are controlled independently. Our study reveals that different neuronal modules in the nerve cord and brain mediate different aspects of navigational decision making. The neurons identified in our screen provide a basis for future detailed mechanistic understanding of the circuit principles of navigational decisionmaking.