Abstract

Circadian clocks schedule biological functions at a specific time of the day. Full comprehension of the clock function requires precise understanding of their entrainment to the environment. The phase of entrained clock is plastic, which depends on different factors such as the period of endogenous oscillator, the period of the zeitgeber cycle (T), and the proportion of light and darkness (day length). The circadian clock of fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is able to entrain to a wide range of T-cycles and day lengths. Here, we investigated the importance of the neuropeptide Pigment-Dispersing Factor (PDF) for entrainment by systematically studying locomotor activity rhythms of Pdf 0 mutants and wild-type flies under different T-cycles (T22 to T32) and different day lengths (8, 12, and 16 hour [h]). Furthermore, we analysed PERIOD protein oscillations in selected groups of clock neurons in both genotypes under T24 and T32 at a day length of 16 h. As expected, we found that the phase of Drosophila’s evening activity and evening neurons advanced with increasing T in all the day lengths. This advance was much larger in Pdf 0 mutants (~7 h) than in wild-type flies causing (1) pronounced desynchrony between morning and evening neurons and (2) evening activity to move in the morning instead of the evening. Most interestingly, we found that the lights-off transition determines the phase of evening neurons in both genotypes and that PDF appears necessary to delay the evening neurons by ~3 h to their wild-type phase. Thus, in T32, PDF first delays the molecular cycling in the evening neurons, and then, as shown in previous studies, delays their neuronal firing rhythms to produce a total delay of ~7 h necessary for a wild-type evening activity phase. We conclude that PDF is crucial for appropriate phasing of Drosophila activity rhythm.

Highlights

  • Circadian clocks schedule biological functions at a specific time of the day

  • We tested the importance of Pigment-Dispersing Factor (PDF) for normal entrainment by systematically investigating locomotor activity rhythms of Pdf0 mutants and wild-type CantonS flies under zeitgeber cycles with different periods and at three different day lengths

  • The inability of Pdf 0 flies to track changes in daylength is suggestive of defective entrainment mechanisms (Yoshii, Wülbeck, et al, 2009)

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Summary

To whom all correspondence should be addressed

Helfrich-Förster / ROLE OF PDF UNDER LONG ZEITGEBER PERIODS 443 about 150 neurons that are characterized by rhythmic expression of canonical clock genes (Helfrich-Förster, Shafer, et al, 2007; Hermann-Luibl and HelfrichFörster, 2015; Top and Young, 2018). Liang et al (2016) showed that PDF delays the Ca2+ rhythms in the E neurons and that it does so to a larger extent when the flies were kept under long days before recording This indicates that PDF is important for seasonal adaptation. We tested the importance of PDF for normal entrainment by systematically investigating locomotor activity rhythms of Pdf0 mutants and wild-type CantonS flies under zeitgeber cycles with different periods and at three different day lengths. PDF is necessary to delay the M neurons (s-LNv) under long zeitgeber periods This confirms that PDF plays an important role in appropriate phasing of Drosophila activity rhythm and demonstrates that its role is more complex than thought before

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