DN1 sub(p) Circadian Neurons Coordinate Acute Light and PDF Inputs to Produce Robust Daily Behavior in Drosophila

Daily behaviors in animals are determined by the interplay between internal timing signals from circadian clocks and environmental stimuli such as light. How these signals are integrated to produce timely and adaptive behavior is unclear. The fruit fly Drosophila exhibits clock-driven activity incre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2010-04, Vol.20 (7), p.591-599
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Luoying, Chung, Brian Y, Lear, Bridget C, Kilman, Valerie L, Liu, Yixiao, Mahesh, Guruswamy, Meissner, Rose-Anne, Hardin, Paul E, Allada, Ravi
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container_end_page 599
container_issue 7
container_start_page 591
container_title Current biology
container_volume 20
creator Zhang, Luoying
Chung, Brian Y
Lear, Bridget C
Kilman, Valerie L
Liu, Yixiao
Mahesh, Guruswamy
Meissner, Rose-Anne
Hardin, Paul E
Allada, Ravi
description Daily behaviors in animals are determined by the interplay between internal timing signals from circadian clocks and environmental stimuli such as light. How these signals are integrated to produce timely and adaptive behavior is unclear. The fruit fly Drosophila exhibits clock-driven activity increases that anticipate dawn and dusk and free-running rhythms under constant conditions. Flies also respond to the onset of light and dark with acute increases in activity. Results - Mutants of a novel ion channel, narrow abdomen (na), lack a robust increase in activity in response to light and show reduced anticipatory behavior and free-running rhythms, providing a genetic link between photic responses and circadian clock function. We used tissue-specific rescue of na to demonstrate a role for [not, vert, similar]16-20 circadian pacemaker neurons, a subset of the posterior dorsal neurons 1 (DN1 sub(p)s), in mediating the acute response to the onset of light as well as morning anticipatory behavior. Circadian pacemaker neurons expressing the neuropeptide PIGMENT-DISPERSING FACTOR (PDF) are especially important for morning anticipation and free-running rhythms and send projections to the DN1 sub(p)s. We also demonstrate that DN1 sub(p) Pdfr expression is sufficient to rescue, at least partially, Pdfr morning anticipation defects as well as defects in free-running rhythms, including those in DN1 molecular clocks. Additionally, these DN1 clocks in wild-type flies are more strongly reset to timing changes in PDF clocks than other pacemaker neurons, suggesting that they are direct targets. Conclusions - Taking these results together, we demonstrate that the DN1 sub(p)s lie at the nexus of PDF and photic signaling to produce appropriate daily behavior.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cub.2010.02.056
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How these signals are integrated to produce timely and adaptive behavior is unclear. The fruit fly Drosophila exhibits clock-driven activity increases that anticipate dawn and dusk and free-running rhythms under constant conditions. Flies also respond to the onset of light and dark with acute increases in activity. Results - Mutants of a novel ion channel, narrow abdomen (na), lack a robust increase in activity in response to light and show reduced anticipatory behavior and free-running rhythms, providing a genetic link between photic responses and circadian clock function. We used tissue-specific rescue of na to demonstrate a role for [not, vert, similar]16-20 circadian pacemaker neurons, a subset of the posterior dorsal neurons 1 (DN1 sub(p)s), in mediating the acute response to the onset of light as well as morning anticipatory behavior. 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Drosophila
title DN1 sub(p) Circadian Neurons Coordinate Acute Light and PDF Inputs to Produce Robust Daily Behavior in Drosophila
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