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      Coupled oscillators control morning and evening locomotor behaviour of Drosophila.

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      Nature
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Daily rhythms of physiology and behaviour are precisely timed by an endogenous circadian clock. These include separate bouts of morning and evening activity, characteristic of Drosophila melanogaster and many other taxa, including mammals. Whereas multiple oscillators have long been proposed to orchestrate such complex behavioural programmes, their nature and interplay have remained elusive. By using cell-specific ablation, we show that the timing of morning and evening activity in Drosophila derives from two distinct groups of circadian neurons: morning activity from the ventral lateral neurons that express the neuropeptide PDF, and evening activity from another group of cells, including the dorsal lateral neurons. Although the two oscillators can function autonomously, cell-specific rescue experiments with circadian clock mutants indicate that they are functionally coupled.

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          Morning and evening peaks of activity rely on different clock neurons of the Drosophila brain.

          In Drosophila, a 'clock' situated in the brain controls circadian rhythms of locomotor activity. This clock relies on several groups of neurons that express the Period (PER) protein, including the ventral lateral neurons (LN(v)s), which express the Pigment-dispersing factor (PDF) neuropeptide, and the PDF-negative dorsal lateral neurons (LN(d)s). In normal cycles of day and night, adult flies exhibit morning and evening peaks of activity; however, the contribution of the different clock neurons to the rest-activity pattern remains unknown. Here, we have used targeted expression of PER to restore the clock function of specific subsets of lateral neurons in arrhythmic per(0) mutant flies. We show that PER expression restricted to the LN(v)s only restores the morning activity, whereas expression of PER in both the LN(v)s and LN(d)s also restores the evening activity. This provides the first neuronal bases for 'morning' and 'evening' oscillators in the Drosophila brain. Furthermore, we show that the LN(v)s alone can generate 24 h activity rhythms in constant darkness, indicating that the morning oscillator is sufficient to drive the circadian system.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Nature
            Nature
            Springer Science and Business Media LLC
            1476-4687
            0028-0836
            Oct 14 2004
            : 431
            : 7010
            Affiliations
            [1 ] Howard Hughes Medical Institute and National Center for Behavioural Genomics, Department of Biology, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02454, USA.
            Article
            nature02926
            10.1038/nature02926
            15483615
            184d6700-c31a-490d-83c8-dd3bcb8e5c26
            History

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