The Neuropeptide Pigment-Dispersing Factor Coordinates Pacemaker Interactions in theDrosophilaCircadian System
Open Access
- 8 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 24 (36) , 7951-7957
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.2370-04.2004
Abstract
In Drosophila, the neuropeptide pigment-dispersing factor (PDF) is required to maintain behavioral rhythms under constant conditions. To understand how PDF exerts its influence, we performed time-series immunostainings for the PERIOD protein in normal and pdf mutant flies over 9 d of constant conditions. Without pdf, pacemaker neurons that normally express PDF maintained two markers of rhythms: that of PERIOD nuclear translocation and its protein staining intensity. As a group, however, they displayed a gradual dispersion in their phasing of nuclear translocation. A separate group of non-PDF circadian pacemakers also maintained PERIOD nuclear translocation rhythms without pdf but exhibited altered phase and amplitude of PERIOD staining intensity. Therefore, pdf is not required to maintain circadian protein oscillations under constant conditions; however, it is required to coordinate the phase and amplitude of such rhythms among the diverse pacemakers. These observations begin to outline the hierarchy of circadian pacemaker circuitry in the Drosophila brain.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Suprachiasmatic Nucleus: A Clock of Multiple ComponentsJournal of Biological Rhythms, 2003
- Drosophila Free-Running Rhythms Require Intercellular CommunicationPLoS Biology, 2003
- The neuroarchitecture of the circadian clock in the brain of Drosophila melanogasterMicroscopy Research and Technique, 2003
- A role for CK2 in the Drosophila circadian oscillatorNature Neuroscience, 2003
- Posttranslational Mechanisms Regulate the Mammalian Circadian ClockPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- The Drosophila Clock Gene double-time Encodes a Protein Closely Related to Human Casein Kinase IεCell, 1998
- Circadian rhythms in drosophila can be driven by period expression in a restricted group of central brain cellsNeuron, 1995
- Temporally regulated nuclear entry of the Drosophila period protein contributes to the circadian clockNeuron, 1995
- A promoterless period gene mediates behavioral rhythmicity and cyclical per expression in a restricted subset of the drosophila nervous systemNeuron, 1994
- Circadian Rhythm in Membrane Conductance Expressed in Isolated NeuronsScience, 1993