Identified Serotonin-Releasing Neurons Induce Behavioral Quiescence and Suppress Mating in Drosophila

2015 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Identified Serotonin-Releasing Neurons Induce Behavioral Quiescence and Suppress Mating in Drosophila​
Pooryasin, A.   & Fiala, A. ​ (2015) 
Journal of Neuroscience35(37) pp. 12792​-12812​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1638-15.2015 

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Authors
Pooryasin, Atefeh ; Fiala, André 
Abstract
Animals show different levels of activity that are reflected in sensory responsiveness and endogenously generated behaviors. Biogenic amines have been determined to be causal factors for these states of arousal. It is well established that, in Drosophila, dopamine and octopamine promote increased arousal. However, little is known about factors that regulate arousal negatively and induce states of quiescence. Moreover, it remains unclear whether global, diffuse modulatory systems comprehensively affecting brain activity determine general states of arousal. Alternatively, individual aminergic neurons might selectively modulate the animals' activity in a distinct behavioral context. Here, we show that artificially activating large populations of serotonin-releasing neurons induces behavioral quiescence and inhibits feeding and mating. We systematically narrowed down a role of serotonin in inhibiting endogenously generated locomotor activity to neurons located in the posterior medial protocerebrum. We identified neurons of this cell cluster that suppress mating, but not feeding behavior. These results suggest that serotonin does not uniformly act as global, negative modulator of general arousal. Rather, distinct serotoninergic neurons can act as inhibitory modulators of specific behaviors.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
Journal of Neuroscience 
ISSN
0270-6474
Sponsor
German Research Foundation [FI 821/3-1]

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