The cell-intrinsic circadian clock is dispensable for lateral posterior clock neuron regulation of Drosophila rest-activity rhythms

Q2 Medicine
Charlene Y.P. Guerrero, Madelyn R. Cusick, Amanda J. Samaras, Natalie S. Shamon, Daniel J. Cavanaugh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Circadian control of behavior arises from intercommunication among a distributed network of circadian clock neurons in the brain. Single-cell sequencing and brain connectome data support the division of the ∼240 brain clock neurons in Drosophila into ∼20 subclusters, and functional studies demonstrate that these populations differentially contribute to behavioral outputs. Here, we have used genetic tools that enable highly selective, cell-specific manipulations to investigate the role of molecular clock function and neuronal activity within the lateral posterior clock neurons (LPNs) in the regulation of rest-activity rhythms. We find that genetic silencing of these neurons, which compromises signaling with downstream neuronal targets, substantially reduces the strength of free-running rest-activity rhythms. In contrast, locomotor activity patterns are robust to CRISPR-mediated disruption of molecular clock cycling within the LPNs. We conclude that the LPNs act as driven oscillators that retain the capacity to transmit circadian information in the absence of cell-intrinsic molecular clocks.
果蝇休息-活动节律的外侧后时钟神经元调节,离不开细胞内的生物钟
行为的昼夜节律控制源于大脑中分布的昼夜节律时钟神经元网络之间的相互交流。单细胞测序和脑连接组数据支持果蝇约240个脑时钟神经元分为约20个亚簇,功能研究表明,这些群体对行为输出的贡献是不同的。在这里,我们使用了遗传工具,使高选择性,细胞特异性操作,以研究分子钟功能和神经元活动在外侧后时钟神经元(lpn)内调节休息-活动节律中的作用。我们发现,这些神经元的基因沉默会损害下游神经元目标的信号,从而大大降低自由运行的休息-活动节律的强度。相反,运动活动模式对crispr介导的lpn内分子时钟循环的破坏是稳健的。我们得出结论,lpn作为驱动振荡器,在缺乏细胞固有分子钟的情况下保留了传递昼夜节律信息的能力。
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来源期刊
Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms
Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms Neuroscience-Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
69 days
期刊介绍: Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms is a multidisciplinary journal for the publication of original research and review articles on basic and translational research into sleep and circadian rhythms. The journal focuses on topics covering the mechanisms of sleep/wake and circadian regulation from molecular to systems level, and on the functional consequences of sleep and circadian disruption. A key aim of the journal is the translation of basic research findings to understand and treat sleep and circadian disorders. Topics include, but are not limited to: Basic and translational research, Molecular mechanisms, Genetics and epigenetics, Inflammation and immunology, Memory and learning, Neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, Neuropsychopharmacology and neuroendocrinology, Behavioral sleep and circadian disorders, Shiftwork, Social jetlag.
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