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Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony

We developed a method for single-cell resolution longitudinal bioluminescence imaging of PERIOD (PER) protein and TIMELESS (TIM) oscillations in cultured male adult Drosophila brains that captures circadian circuit-wide cycling under simulated day/night cycles. Light input analysis confirms that CRY...

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Autores principales: Nave, Ceazar, Roberts, Logan, Hwu, Patrick, Estrella, Jerson D., Vo, Thanh C., Nguyen, Thanh H., Bui, Tony Thai, Rindner, Daniel J., Pervolarakis, Nicholas, Shaw, Paul J., Leise, Tanya L., Holmes, Todd C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society for Neuroscience 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8211545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33931552
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3074-19.2021
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author Nave, Ceazar
Roberts, Logan
Hwu, Patrick
Estrella, Jerson D.
Vo, Thanh C.
Nguyen, Thanh H.
Bui, Tony Thai
Rindner, Daniel J.
Pervolarakis, Nicholas
Shaw, Paul J.
Leise, Tanya L.
Holmes, Todd C.
author_facet Nave, Ceazar
Roberts, Logan
Hwu, Patrick
Estrella, Jerson D.
Vo, Thanh C.
Nguyen, Thanh H.
Bui, Tony Thai
Rindner, Daniel J.
Pervolarakis, Nicholas
Shaw, Paul J.
Leise, Tanya L.
Holmes, Todd C.
author_sort Nave, Ceazar
collection PubMed
description We developed a method for single-cell resolution longitudinal bioluminescence imaging of PERIOD (PER) protein and TIMELESS (TIM) oscillations in cultured male adult Drosophila brains that captures circadian circuit-wide cycling under simulated day/night cycles. Light input analysis confirms that CRYPTOCHROME (CRY) is the primary circadian photoreceptor and mediates clock disruption by constant light (LL), and that eye light input is redundant to CRY; 3-h light phase delays (Friday) followed by 3-h light phase advances (Monday morning) simulate the common practice of staying up later at night on weekends, sleeping in later on weekend days then returning to standard schedule Monday morning [weekend light shift (WLS)]. PER and TIM oscillations are highly synchronous across all major circadian neuronal subgroups in unshifted light schedules for 11 d. In contrast, WLS significantly dampens PER oscillator synchrony and rhythmicity in most circadian neurons during and after exposure. Lateral ventral neuron (LNv) oscillations are the first to desynchronize in WLS and the last to resynchronize in WLS. Surprisingly, the dorsal neuron group-3 (DN3s) increase their within-group synchrony in response to WLS. In vivo, WLS induces transient defects in sleep stability, learning, and memory that temporally coincide with circuit desynchrony. Our findings suggest that WLS schedules disrupt circuit-wide circadian neuronal oscillator synchrony for much of the week, thus leading to observed behavioral defects in sleep, learning, and memory.
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spelling pubmed-82115452021-06-21 Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony Nave, Ceazar Roberts, Logan Hwu, Patrick Estrella, Jerson D. Vo, Thanh C. Nguyen, Thanh H. Bui, Tony Thai Rindner, Daniel J. Pervolarakis, Nicholas Shaw, Paul J. Leise, Tanya L. Holmes, Todd C. J Neurosci Research Articles We developed a method for single-cell resolution longitudinal bioluminescence imaging of PERIOD (PER) protein and TIMELESS (TIM) oscillations in cultured male adult Drosophila brains that captures circadian circuit-wide cycling under simulated day/night cycles. Light input analysis confirms that CRYPTOCHROME (CRY) is the primary circadian photoreceptor and mediates clock disruption by constant light (LL), and that eye light input is redundant to CRY; 3-h light phase delays (Friday) followed by 3-h light phase advances (Monday morning) simulate the common practice of staying up later at night on weekends, sleeping in later on weekend days then returning to standard schedule Monday morning [weekend light shift (WLS)]. PER and TIM oscillations are highly synchronous across all major circadian neuronal subgroups in unshifted light schedules for 11 d. In contrast, WLS significantly dampens PER oscillator synchrony and rhythmicity in most circadian neurons during and after exposure. Lateral ventral neuron (LNv) oscillations are the first to desynchronize in WLS and the last to resynchronize in WLS. Surprisingly, the dorsal neuron group-3 (DN3s) increase their within-group synchrony in response to WLS. In vivo, WLS induces transient defects in sleep stability, learning, and memory that temporally coincide with circuit desynchrony. Our findings suggest that WLS schedules disrupt circuit-wide circadian neuronal oscillator synchrony for much of the week, thus leading to observed behavioral defects in sleep, learning, and memory. Society for Neuroscience 2021-06-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8211545/ /pubmed/33931552 http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3074-19.2021 Text en Copyright © 2021 Nave, Roberts et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided that the original work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Nave, Ceazar
Roberts, Logan
Hwu, Patrick
Estrella, Jerson D.
Vo, Thanh C.
Nguyen, Thanh H.
Bui, Tony Thai
Rindner, Daniel J.
Pervolarakis, Nicholas
Shaw, Paul J.
Leise, Tanya L.
Holmes, Todd C.
Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title_full Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title_fullStr Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title_full_unstemmed Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title_short Weekend Light Shifts Evoke Persistent Drosophila Circadian Neural Network Desynchrony
title_sort weekend light shifts evoke persistent drosophila circadian neural network desynchrony
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8211545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33931552
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3074-19.2021
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