Adaptation to photoperiod via dynamic neurotransmitter segregation
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Maddaloni, G.; Chang, Y. J.; Senft, R. A.; Dymecki, S. M.
署名单位:
Harvard University; Harvard Medical School
刊物名称:
Nature
ISSN/ISSBN:
0028-6140
DOI:
10.1038/s41586-024-07692-7
发表日期:
2024-08-01
页码:
147-+
关键词:
suprachiasmatic nucleus
serotonergic neurons
raphe neurons
dorsal
light
inputs
rhythm
5-ht
identification
ORGANIZATION
摘要:
Changes in the amount of daylight (photoperiod) alter physiology and behaviour(1,2). Adaptive responses to seasonal photoperiods are vital to all organisms-dysregulation associates with disease, including affective disorders(3) and metabolic syndromes(4). The circadian rhythm circuitry is implicated in such responses(5,6), yet little is known about the precise cellular substrates that underlie phase synchronization to photoperiod change. Here we identify a brain circuit and system of axon branch-specific and reversible neurotransmitter deployment that are critical for behavioural and sleep adaptation to photoperiod. A type of neuron called mrEn1-Pet1(7) in the mouse brainstem median raphe nucleus segregates serotonin from VGLUT3 (also known as SLC17A8, a proxy for glutamate) to different axonal branches that innervate specific brain regions involved in circadian rhythm and sleep-wake timing(8,9). This branch-specific neurotransmitter deployment did not distinguish between daylight and dark phase; however, it reorganized with change in photoperiod. Axonal boutons, but not cell soma, changed neurochemical phenotype upon a shift away from equinox light/dark conditions, and these changes were reversed upon return to equinox conditions. When we genetically disabled Vglut3 in mrEn1-Pet1 neurons, sleep-wake periods, voluntary activity and clock gene expression did not synchronize to the new photoperiod or were delayed. Combining intersectional rabies virus tracing and projection-specific neuronal silencing, we delineated a preoptic area-to-mrEn1Pet1 connection that was responsible for decoding the photoperiodic inputs, driving the neurotransmitter reorganization and promoting behavioural synchronization. Our results reveal a brain circuit and periodic, branch-specific neurotransmitter deployment that regulates organismal adaptation to photoperiod change.