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Dive into the research topics where Toshihide Hige is active.

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Featured researches published by Toshihide Hige.


Neuron | 2015

Heterosynaptic Plasticity Underlies Aversive Olfactory Learning in Drosophila

Toshihide Hige; Yoshinori Aso; Mehrab N. Modi; Gerald M. Rubin; Glenn C. Turner

Although associative learning has been localized to specific brain areas in many animals, identifying the underlying synaptic processes in vivo has been difficult. Here, we provide the first demonstration of long-term synaptic plasticity at the output site of the Drosophila mushroom body. Pairing an odor with activation of specific dopamine neurons induces both learning and odor-specific synaptic depression. The plasticity induction strictly depends on the temporal order of the two stimuli, replicating the logical requirement for associative learning. Furthermore, we reveal that dopamine action is confined to and distinct across different anatomical compartments of the mushroom body lobes. Finally, we find that overlap between sparse representations of different odors defines both stimulus specificity of the plasticity and generalizability of associative memories across odors. Thus, the plasticity we find here not only manifests important features of associative learning but also provides general insights into how a sparse sensory code is read out.


Nature | 2015

Plasticity-driven individualization of olfactory coding in mushroom body output neurons.

Toshihide Hige; Yoshinori Aso; Gerald M. Rubin; Glenn C. Turner

Although all sensory circuits ascend to higher brain areas where stimuli are represented in sparse, stimulus-specific activity patterns, relatively little is known about sensory coding on the descending side of neural circuits, as a network converges. In insects, mushroom bodies have been an important model system for studying sparse coding in the olfactory system, where this format is important for accurate memory formation. In Drosophila, it has recently been shown that the 2,000 Kenyon cells of the mushroom body converge onto a population of only 34 mushroom body output neurons (MBONs), which fall into 21 anatomically distinct cell types. Here we provide the first, to our knowledge, comprehensive view of olfactory representations at the fourth layer of the circuit, where we find a clear transition in the principles of sensory coding. We show that MBON tuning curves are highly correlated with one another. This is in sharp contrast to the process of progressive decorrelation of tuning in the earlier layers of the circuit. Instead, at the population level, odour representations are reformatted so that positive and negative correlations arise between representations of different odours. At the single-cell level, we show that uniquely identifiable MBONs display profoundly different tuning across different animals, but that tuning of the same neuron across the two hemispheres of an individual fly was nearly identical. Thus, individualized coordination of tuning arises at this level of the olfactory circuit. Furthermore, we find that this individualization is an active process that requires a learning-related gene, rutabaga. Ultimately, neural circuits have to flexibly map highly stimulus-specific information in sparse layers onto a limited number of different motor outputs. The reformatting of sensory representations we observe here may mark the beginning of this sensory-motor transition in the olfactory system.


eLife | 2017

A connectome of a learning and memory center in the adult Drosophila brain

Shin-ya Takemura; Yoshinori Aso; Toshihide Hige; Allan M. Wong; Zhiyuan Lu; C. Shan Xu; Patricia K. Rivlin; Harald F. Hess; Ting Zhao; Toufiq Parag; Stuart Berg; Gary Huang; William T. Katz; Donald J. Olbris; Stephen M. Plaza; Lowell Umayam; Roxanne Aniceto; Lei-Ann Chang; Shirley Lauchie; Omotara Ogundeyi; Christopher Ordish; Aya Shinomiya; Christopher Sigmund; Satoko Takemura; Julie Tran; Glenn C. Turner; Gerald M. Rubin; Louis K. Scheffer

Understanding memory formation, storage and retrieval requires knowledge of the underlying neuronal circuits. In Drosophila, the mushroom body (MB) is the major site of associative learning. We reconstructed the morphologies and synaptic connections of all 983 neurons within the three functional units, or compartments, that compose the adult MB’s α lobe, using a dataset of isotropic 8 nm voxels collected by focused ion-beam milling scanning electron microscopy. We found that Kenyon cells (KCs), whose sparse activity encodes sensory information, each make multiple en passant synapses to MB output neurons (MBONs) in each compartment. Some MBONs have inputs from all KCs, while others differentially sample sensory modalities. Only 6% of KC>MBON synapses receive a direct synapse from a dopaminergic neuron (DAN). We identified two unanticipated classes of synapses, KC>DAN and DAN>MBON. DAN activation produces a slow depolarization of the MBON in these DAN>MBON synapses and can weaken memory recall. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.26975.001


eLife | 2016

Direct neural pathways convey distinct visual information to Drosophila mushroom bodies

Katrin Vogt; Yoshinori Aso; Toshihide Hige; Stephan Knapek; Toshiharu Ichinose; Anja Friedrich; Glenn C. Turner; Gerald M. Rubin; Hiromu Tanimoto

Previously, we demonstrated that visual and olfactory associative memories of Drosophila share mushroom body (MB) circuits (Vogt et al., 2014). Unlike for odor representation, the MB circuit for visual information has not been characterized. Here, we show that a small subset of MB Kenyon cells (KCs) selectively responds to visual but not olfactory stimulation. The dendrites of these atypical KCs form a ventral accessory calyx (vAC), distinct from the main calyx that receives olfactory input. We identified two types of visual projection neurons (VPNs) directly connecting the optic lobes and the vAC. Strikingly, these VPNs are differentially required for visual memories of color and brightness. The segregation of visual and olfactory domains in the MB allows independent processing of distinct sensory memories and may be a conserved form of sensory representations among insects. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.14009.001


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Neurosteroid pregnenolone sulfate enhances glutamatergic synaptic transmission by facilitating presynaptic calcium currents at the calyx of Held of immature rats.

Toshihide Hige; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Tomoyuki Takahashi

Pregnenolone sulfate (PREGS) is an endogenous neurosteroid widely released from neurons in the brain, and is thought to play a memory‐enhancing role. At excitatory synapses PREGS facilitates transmitter release, but the underlying mechanism is not known. We addressed this issue at the calyx of Held in rat brainstem slices, where direct whole‐cell recordings from giant nerve terminals are feasible. PREGS potentiated nerve‐evoked excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) without affecting the amplitude of miniature EPSCs, suggesting that its site of action is presynaptic. In whole‐cell recordings from calyceal nerve terminals, PREGS facilitated Ca2+ currents, by accelerating their activation kinetics and shifting the half‐activation voltage toward negative potentials. PREGS had no effect on presynaptic K+ currents, resting conductance or action potential waveforms. In simultaneous pre‐ and postsynaptic recordings, PREGS did not change the relationship between presynaptic Ca2+ influx and EPSCs, suggesting that exocytotic machinery downstream of Ca2+ influx is not involved in its effect. PREGS facilitated Ba2+ currents recorded from nerve terminals and also from HEK 293 cells expressed with recombinant N‐ or P/Q‐type Ca2+ channels, suggesting that PREGS‐induced facilitation of voltage‐gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) is neither Ca2+ dependent nor VGCC‐type specific. The PREGS‐induced VGCC facilitation was blocked by the PREGS scavenger (2‐hydroxypropyl)‐β‐cyclodextrin applied from outside, but not from inside, of nerve terminals. We conclude that PREGS facilitates VGCCs in presynaptic terminals by acting from outside, thereby enhancing transmitter release. We propose that PREGS may directly modulate VGCCs acting on their extracellular domain.


Neuroscience Research | 2017

What can tiny mushrooms in fruit flies tell us about learning and memory

Toshihide Hige

Nervous systems have evolved to translate external stimuli into appropriate behavioral responses. In an ever-changing environment, flexible adjustment of behavioral choice by experience-dependent learning is essential for the animals survival. Associative learning is a simple form of learning that is widely observed from worms to humans. To understand the whole process of learning, we need to know how sensory information is represented and transformed in the brain, how it is changed by experience, and how the changes are reflected on motor output. To tackle these questions, studying numerically simple invertebrate nervous systems has a great advantage. In this review, I will feature the Pavlovian olfactory learning in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. The mushroom body is a key brain area for the olfactory learning in this organism. Recently, comprehensive anatomical information and the genetic tool sets were made available for the mushroom body circuit. This greatly accelerated the physiological understanding of the learning process. One of the key findings was dopamine-induced long-term synaptic plasticity that can alter the representations of stimulus valence. I will mostly focus on the new studies within these few years and discuss what we can possibly learn about the vertebrate systems from this model organism.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010

Evidence for lateral mobility of voltage sensors in prokaryotic voltage-gated sodium channels

Hitoshi Nagura; Katsumasa Irie; Tomoya Imai; Takushi Shimomura; Toshihide Hige; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi

Voltage-sensor domains (VSDs) in voltage-gated ion channels are thought to regulate the probability that a channel adopts an open conformation by moving vertically in the lipid bilayer. Here we characterized the movement of the VSDs of the prokaryotic voltage-gated sodium channel, NaChBac. Substitution of residue T110, which is located on the extracellular side of the fourth transmembrane helix of the VSD, by cysteine resulted in the formation of a disulfide bond between adjacent subunits in the channel. Our results suggest that T110 residues in VSDs of adjacent subunits can come into close proximity, implying that the VSDs can move laterally in the membrane and constitute a mechanism that regulates channel activity.


Neuron | 2015

Learning: The Good, the Bad, and the Fly

Toshihide Hige; Glenn C. Turner

Olfactory memories can be very good-your mothers baking-or very bad-your fathers cooking. We go through life forming these different associations with the smells we encounter. But what makes one association pleasant and another repulsive? Work in deep areas of the Drosophila brain has revealed the beginnings of an answer, as reported in this issue of Neuron by Owald et al. (2015).


Science | 2005

Vesicle Endocytosis Requires Dynamin-Dependent GTP Hydrolysis at a Fast CNS Synapse

Takayuki Yamashita; Toshihide Hige; Tomoyuki Takahashi


Archive | 2016

Flexible olfactory coding by mushroom body output neurons of Drosophila

Toshihide Hige; Yoshinori Aso; M. N. Modi; Gerald M. Rubin; Glenn C. Turner

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Glenn C. Turner

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Gerald M. Rubin

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Yoshinori Aso

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Tomoyuki Takahashi

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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Chikara Sato

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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