Conditional chemoconnectomics (cCCTomics) as a strategy for efficient and conditional targeting of chemical transmission

Author:

Mao Renbo12345ORCID,Yu Jianjun1234,Deng Bowen1234,Dai Xihuimin1234,Du Yuyao1234,Du Sujie1234,Zhang Wenxia1234,Rao Yi1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Neurochemical Biology, Chinese Institute for Brain Research

2. PKU-IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences, School of Life Sciences, Department of Chemical Biology, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Peking University

3. Chinese Institutes for Medical Research, Capital Medical University; Changping Laboratory

4. Research Unit of Medical Neurobiology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences

5. National Institute of Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College

Abstract

Dissection of neural circuitry underlying behaviors is a central theme in neurobiology. We have previously proposed the concept of chemoconnectome (CCT) to cover the entire chemical transmission between neurons and target cells in an organism and created tools for studying it (CCTomics) by targeting all genes related to the CCT in Drosophila. Here we have created lines targeting the CCT in a conditional manner after modifying GFP RNA interference, Flp-out, and CRISPR/Cas9 technologies. All three strategies have been validated to be highly effective, with the best using chromatin-peptide fused Cas9 variants and scaffold optimized sgRNAs. As a proof of principle, we conducted a comprehensive intersection analysis of CCT genes expression profiles in the clock neurons, uncovering 43 CCT genes present in clock neurons. Specific elimination of each from clock neurons revealed that loss of the neuropeptide CNMa in two posterior dorsal clock neurons (DN1ps) or its receptor (CNMaR) caused advanced morning activity, indicating a suppressive role of CNMa-CNMaR on morning anticipation, opposite to the promoting role of PDF-PDFR on morning anticipation. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of conditional CCTomics and its tools created here and establish an antagonistic relationship between CNMa-CNMaR and PDF-PDFR signaling in regulating morning anticipation.

Funder

Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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