Dopaminergic modulation of arousal in Drosophila.

TitleDopaminergic modulation of arousal in Drosophila.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsAndretic R, van Swinderen B, Greenspan RJ
JournalCurr Biol
Volume15
Issue13
Pagination1165-75
Date Published2005 Jul 12
ISSN0960-9822
KeywordsAnimals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Arousal, Brain, Dopa Decarboxylase, Dopamine, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drosophila, Drosophila Proteins, Dynamins, Electrophysiology, Methamphetamine, Mutation, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Sleep, Visual Perception
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Arousal levels in the brain set thresholds for behavior, from simple to complex. The mechanistic underpinnings of the various phenomena comprising arousal, however, are still poorly understood. Drosophila behaviors have been studied that span different levels of arousal, from sleep to visual perception to psychostimulant responses.

RESULTS: We have investigated neurobiological mechanisms of arousal in the Drosophila brain by a combined behavioral, genetic, pharmacological, and electrophysiological approach. Administration of methamphetamine (METH) suppresses sleep and promotes active wakefulness, whereas an inhibitor of dopamine synthesis promotes sleep. METH affects courtship behavior by increasing sexual arousal while decreasing successful sexual performance. Electrophysiological recordings from the medial protocerebrum of wild-type flies showed that METH ingestion has rapid and detrimental effects on a brain response associated with perception of visual stimuli. Recordings in genetically manipulated animals show that dopaminergic transmission is required for these responses and that visual-processing deficits caused by attenuated dopaminergic transmission can be rescued by METH.

CONCLUSIONS: We show that changes in dopamine levels differentially affect arousal for behaviors of varying complexity. Complex behaviors, such as visual perception, degenerate when dopamine levels are either too high or too low, in accordance with the inverted-U hypothesis of dopamine action in the mammalian brain. Simpler behaviors, such as sleep and locomotion, show graded responses that follow changes in dopamine level.

DOI10.1016/j.cub.2005.05.025
Alternate JournalCurr. Biol.
PubMed ID16005288
Category: 
Greenspan Laboratory