Neuropeptide signalling and perineurial barrier generate a persistent stress-induced internal state in Drosophila

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Abstract

Although fear conditioning has elucidated cue-evoked acute fear responses, the mechanisms by which stress experiences induce generalized internal states linked to anxiety are poorly understood. Here, we report that robust stress induces a persistent behavioral change characterized by avoidance of a confined space, claustrophobia-like behavior in Drosophila . Unlike aversive memory formation, the development of claustrophobia-like behavior does not require dopamine receptors. Our neuronal screening determined that neuropeptide signalling via Allatostatin-A inactivates the downstream neurons via its receptor AstA-R1, causally inducing claustrophobia-like behavior. Moreover, gene expression profiling of individual fly heads revealed that immune response activation in perineurial barrier is involved in claustrophobia-like behavior. Our data demonstrate that stress-induced persistent behavioral change would not be related to a canonical mechanism of aversive memory formation, rather involves neuropeptidergic signalling and perineurial barrier, providing the mechanism determining internal states which persistently change behavioral modes.

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