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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A Neural Network Underlying Circadian Entrainment and Photoperiodic Adjustment of Sleep and Activity in Drosophila.

TLDR
The results establish that input from the HB eyelets differentially impacts the physiology of neuronal subgroups, and provide a mechanistic model of light transduction and integration into the circadian system, identifying new and unexpected network motifs within the circadian clock neuron network.
Abstract
A sensitivity of the circadian clock to light/dark cycles ensures that biological rhythms maintain optimal phase relationships with the external day. In animals, the circadian clock neuron network (CCNN) driving sleep/activity rhythms receives light input from multiple photoreceptors, but how these photoreceptors modulate CCNN components is not well understood. Here we show that the Hofbauer-Buchner eyelets differentially modulate two classes of ventral lateral neurons (LNvs) within the Drosophila CCNN. The eyelets antagonize Cryptochrome (CRY)- and compound-eye-based photoreception in the large LNvs while synergizing CRY-mediated photoreception in the small LNvs. Furthermore, we show that the large LNvs interact with subsets of “evening cells” to adjust the timing of the evening peak of activity in a day length-dependent manner. Our work identifies a peptidergic connection between the large LNvs and a group of evening cells that is critical for the seasonal adjustment of circadian rhythms. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT In animals, circadian clocks have evolved to orchestrate the timing of behavior and metabolism. Consistent timing requires the entrainment these clocks to the solar day, a process that is critical for an organism9s health. Light cycles are the most important external cue for the entrainment of circadian clocks, and the circadian system uses multiple photoreceptors to link timekeeping to the light/dark cycle. How light information from these photorecptors is integrated into the circadian clock neuron network to support entrainment is not understood. Our results establish that input from the HB eyelets differentially impacts the physiology of neuronal subgroups. This input pathway, together with input from the compound eyes, precisely times the activity of flies under long summer days. Our results provide a mechanistic model of light transduction and integration into the circadian system, identifying new and unexpected network motifs within the circadian clock neuron network.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Circadian Rhythms and Sleep in Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: Flies remain a valuable tool for both discovery of novel molecules and deep mechanistic understanding of sleep and circadian rhythms, and are beginning to understand how the identified molecules and neurons interact with each other, and with the environment, to regulate sleep.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in neuropeptide signaling in Drosophila, from genes to physiology and behavior.

TL;DR: The roles of peptides in olfaction, taste, foraging, feeding, clock function/sleep, aggression, mating/reproduction, learning and other behaviors, as well as in regulation of development, growth, metabolic and water homeostasis, stress responses, fecundity, and lifespan are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A genetic, genomic, and computational resource for exploring neural circuit function

TL;DR: Gen expression patterns in distinct neural cell types of the Drosophila visual system are characterized using genetic lines to access individual cell types, the TAPIN-seq method to measure their transcriptomes, and a probabilistic method to interpret these measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

RNA-seq analysis of Drosophila clock and non-clock neurons reveals neuron-specific cycling and novel candidate neuropeptides.

TL;DR: The three circadian groups are surprisingly diverse in their cycling transcripts and overall gene expression patterns, which include known and putative novel neuropeptides, indicating that different regulatory principles govern transcript oscillations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substrates for Neuronal Cotransmission With Neuropeptides and Small Molecule Neurotransmitters in Drosophila.

TL;DR: This review summarizes what is known about Drosophila neurons and neuronal circuits where different neuropeptides and SMNs are colocalized and discusses the functional relevance of coexisting peptides in the intestine.
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Imaging neural activity in worms, flies and mice with improved GCaMP calcium indicators

TL;DR: A single-wavelength GCaMP2-based GECI (GCaMP3) is developed, with increased baseline fluorescence, increased dynamic range and higher affinity for calcium, and long-term imaging in the motor cortex of behaving mice revealed large fluorescence changes in imaged neurons over months.
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Stability, Precision, and Near-24-Hour Period of the Human Circadian Pacemaker

TL;DR: In this article, the intrinsic period of the human circadian pacemaker averages 24.18 hours in both age groups, with a tight distribution consistent with other species, with important implications for understanding the pathophysiology of disrupted sleep in older people.
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Suprachiasmatic Nucleus: Cell Autonomy and Network Properties

TL;DR: The SCN network synchronizes its component cellular oscillators, reinforces their oscillations, responds to light input by altering their phase distribution, increases their robustness to genetic perturbations, and enhances their precision.
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A pdf Neuropeptide Gene Mutation and Ablation of PDF Neurons Each Cause Severe Abnormalities of Behavioral Circadian Rhythms in Drosophila

TL;DR: The assignment of LNv neurons as the principal circadian pacemakers controlling daily locomotion in Drosophila is confirmed and PDF is implicate as the Principal circadian transmitter.
Journal ArticleDOI

An internal thermal sensor controlling temperature preference in Drosophila

TL;DR: Flys select a preferred temperature by using a thermal sensing pathway tuned to trigger avoidance of temperatures that deviate even slightly from the preferred temperature, which provides a potentially general strategy for robustly selecting a narrow temperature range optimal for survival.
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