Network synchrony creates neural filters promoting quiescence in Drosophila

Davide Raccuglia, Raquel Suárez-Grimalt, Laura Krumm, Anatoli Ender, Cedric B Brodersen, Sridhar R. Jagannathan, Martin Freire Krück, Niccolò P Pampaloni, Carolin Rauch, York Winter, Genevieve Yvon-Durocher, Richard Kempter, Jörg RP Geiger, David Owald

Animals require undisturbed periods of rest during which they undergo recuperative processes1. However, it is unclear how brain states arise that are able to dissociate an animal from its external world, enabling quiescent behaviours, while retaining vigilance to salient sensory cues. Here we describe a neural mechanism in Drosophila that creates neural filters that engender a brain state that enables quiescent behaviour by generating coherent slow-wave activity (SWA) between sleep-need (R5)- and locomotion-promoting neural networks. The coherence of SWA is subject to circadian and homeostatic control and can be modulated by sensory experience. Mimicry of coherent SWA reveals that R5 oscillations reduce responsiveness to visual stimuli by rhythmically associating neural activity of locomotion-promoting cells, effectively overruling their output. These networks can regulate behavioural responsiveness by providing antagonistic inputs to downstream head-direction cells. Thus, coherent oscillations provide the mechanistic basis for a neural filter by temporally associating opposing signals, resulting in reduced functional connectivity between locomotion-gating and navigational networks. We propose that the temporal pattern of SWA provides the structure to create a ‘breakable’ filter, permitting the animal to enter a quiescent state, while providing the architecture for strong or salient stimuli to ‘break’ the neural interaction, consequently allowing the animal to react.

Nature (2025)

Keywords

circadian rhythms and sleepneurophysiologysensory processing
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