"Graduate student Shiuan-Tze Wu led a study of some ingenious
organization into the odor-sensing cells of fruit flies. He and his collaborators found that the odor-detector cells in the insects’ antennae talk to one another in a way that saves brainpower. It’s all so impressive that the senior author of the report called it “simple yet elegant,” according to the UC San Diego News Center.They ran a series of tests on the cells, each called an olfactory receptor neuron (ORN). The cells partner up into sets called sensilla—mostly in pairs, but sometimes in groups of up to four cells.
Their results showed that one neuron in the set stimulates a particular
behavior, while its partner neuron inhibits that same behavior. Example
fruit fly behaviors include attraction to vinegar or promotion of
egg-laying. The PNAS study authors wrote, “A striking pattern
emerged…ORNs housed in the same sensillum antagonistically regulate the
same behavior.”
A: Electrochemicals dance across the tiny space between neurons in a sensillum. Together, these diminutive detectors quickly calculate the proper amount and preferred effect of each odor before they send a “do” or “don’t” message. This saves the fly brain’s computing power which might otherwise get overwhelmed with a barrage of confusing scents.
Nature is as poor a substitute for a Creator as a puddle of pigment is
for a painter. An unbiased view clears the way to attribute the “marvel”
of these “simple yet elegant” dual-function fruit fly nerve cells to
the work of a Person with the power to choose." ICR