Behavioral consequences of dopamine deficiency in the Drosophila central nervous system

The neuromodulatory function of dopamine (DA) is an inherent feature of nervous systems of all animals. To learn more about the function of neural DA in Drosophila, we generated mutant flies that lack tyrosine hydroxylase, and thus DA biosynthesis, selectively in the nervous system. We found that DA...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 108; no. 2; pp. 834 - 839
Main Authors Riemensperger, Thomas, Isabel, Guillaume, Coulom, Hélène, Neuser, Kirsa, Seugnet, Laurent, Kume, Kazuhiko, Iché-Torres, Magali, Cassar, Marlène, Strauss, Roland, Preat, Thomas, Hirsh, Jay, Birman, Serge, Nash, Howard
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 11.01.2011
National Acad Sciences
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Summary:The neuromodulatory function of dopamine (DA) is an inherent feature of nervous systems of all animals. To learn more about the function of neural DA in Drosophila, we generated mutant flies that lack tyrosine hydroxylase, and thus DA biosynthesis, selectively in the nervous system. We found that DA is absent or below detection limits in the adult brain of these flies. Despite this, they have a lifespan similar to WT flies. These mutants show reduced activity, extended sleep time, locomotor deficits that increase with age, and they are hypophagic. Whereas odor and electrical shock avoidance are not affected, aversive olfactory learning is abolished. Instead, DA-deficient flies have an apparently "masochistic" tendency to prefer the shock-associated odor 2 h after conditioning. Similarly, sugar preference is absent, whereas sugar stimulation of foreleg taste neurons induces normal proboscis extension. Feeding the DA precursor L-DOPA to adults substantially rescues the learning deficit as well as other impaired behaviors that were tested. DA-deficient flies are also defective in positive phototaxis, without alteration in visual perception and optomotor response. Surprisingly, visual tracking is largely maintained, and these mutants still possess an efficient spatial orientation memory. Our findings show that flies can perform complex brain functions in the absence of neural DA, whereas specific behaviors involving, in particular, arousal and choice require normal levels of this neuromodulator.
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Edited by Howard Nash, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, and approved November 30, 2010 (received for review August 3, 2010)
Author contributions: S.B. designed research; T.R., G.I., H.C., K.N., L.S., K.K., M.I.-T., J.H., and S.B. performed research; T.R., H.C., L.S., K.K., M.C., R.S., T.P., J.H., and S.B. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; T.R., G.I., H.C., K.N., L.S., K.K., R.S., T.P., J.H., and S.B. analyzed data; and T.R., J.H., and S.B. wrote the paper.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1010930108