Abstract

As in vertebrates, dopaminergic neural systems are key regulators of motor programs in insects, including the fly Drosophila melanogaster. Dopaminergic systems innervate the Mushroom Bodies (MB), an important association area in the insect brain primarily associated to olfactory learning and memory, but that has been also implicated with the execution of motor programs. The main objectives of this work is to assess the idea that dopaminergic systems contribute to the execution of motor programs in Drosophila larvae, and then, to evaluate the contribution of specific dopaminergic receptors expressed in MB to these programs. Our results show that animals bearing a mutation in the dopamine transporter show reduced locomotion, while mutants for the dopaminergic biosynthetic enzymes or the dopamine receptor Dop1R1 exhibit increased locomotion. Pan-neuronal expression of an RNAi for the Dop1R1 confirmed these results. Further studies show that animals expressing the RNAi for Dop1R1 in the entire MB neuronal population or only in the MB γ-lobe forming neurons, exhibit an increased motor output, as well. Interestingly, our results also suggest that other dopaminergic receptors do not contribute to larval motor behavior. Thus, our data support the proposition that CNS dopamine systems innervating MB neurons modulate larval locomotion and that Dop1R1 mediates this effect.

Highlights

  • Biogenic amines (BAs), among them dopamine, are molecules extensively distributed in the vertebrate central nervous system (CNS), which act on specific receptors to modulate a wide range of behaviors including the execution of motor programs [1, 2]

  • As a first approach to evaluate whether dopaminergic systems affects motor programs in Drosophila larvae, we assessed locomotion in animals expressing mutations for biosynthetic enzymes for dopamine and their receptors (Fig 1)

  • Animals expressing a mutation in Dopa decarboxylase (Ddc), an enzyme that contributes in the biosynthesis of both, dopamine and serotonin, show increased locomotion (Fig 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Biogenic amines (BAs), among them dopamine, are molecules extensively distributed in the vertebrate central nervous system (CNS), which act on specific receptors to modulate a wide range of behaviors including the execution of motor programs [1, 2]. In the adult fly brain, two are the main structures responsible for the generation and modulation of motor programs: the Central Complex (CC) and the Mushroom Bodies (MB), respectively [6,7,8]. These structures receive strong aminergic innervation, and it is possible to suggest that through the innervation of these structures BA systems exert their actions on motor programs [9,10,11,12]

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