Seidner Glen, Robinson James E, Wu Meilin, Worden Kurtresha, Masek Pavel, Roberts Stephen W, Keene Alex C, Joiner William J
Department of Pharmacology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Department of Pharmacology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA; Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Curr Biol. 2015 Nov 16;25(22):2928-38. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.10.006. Epub 2015 Oct 29.
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep need. Whereas abundant experimental evidence suggests that sleep need increases with time spent awake, the contributions of different brain arousal systems have not been assessed independently of each other to determine whether certain neural circuits, rather than waking per se, selectively contribute to sleep homeostasis. Using the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, we found that sustained thermogenetic activation of three independent neurotransmitter systems promoted nighttime wakefulness. However, only sleep deprivation resulting from activation of cholinergic neurons was sufficient to elicit subsequent homeostatic recovery sleep, as assessed by multiple behavioral criteria. In contrast, sleep deprivation resulting from activation of octopaminergic neurons suppressed homeostatic recovery sleep, indicating that wakefulness can be dissociated from accrual of sleep need. Neurons that promote sleep homeostasis were found to innervate the central brain and motor control regions of the thoracic ganglion. Blocking activity of these neurons suppressed recovery sleep but did not alter baseline sleep, further differentiating between neural control of sleep homeostasis and daily fluctuations in the sleep/wake cycle. Importantly, selective activation of wake-promoting neurons without engaging the sleep homeostat impaired subsequent short-term memory, thus providing evidence that neural circuits that regulate sleep homeostasis are important for behavioral plasticity. Together, our data suggest a neural circuit model involving distinct populations of wake-promoting neurons, some of which are involved in homeostatic control of sleep and cognition.
一个主要调节睡眠时间的昼夜节律时钟,以及一个检测并响应睡眠需求的稳态机制。尽管大量实验证据表明睡眠需求随清醒时间增加,但不同脑唤醒系统的作用尚未被独立评估,以确定某些神经回路而非清醒本身是否选择性地促进睡眠稳态。利用果蝇(黑腹果蝇),我们发现三个独立神经递质系统的持续热遗传激活促进夜间清醒。然而,通过多种行为标准评估,只有胆碱能神经元激活导致的睡眠剥夺足以引发随后的稳态恢复睡眠。相比之下,章鱼胺能神经元激活导致的睡眠剥夺抑制了稳态恢复睡眠,表明清醒可与睡眠需求的积累相分离。发现促进睡眠稳态的神经元支配着中枢脑和胸神经节的运动控制区域。阻断这些神经元的活动会抑制恢复睡眠,但不会改变基线睡眠,进一步区分了睡眠稳态的神经控制与睡眠/觉醒周期的日常波动。重要的是,在不激活睡眠稳态调节器的情况下选择性激活促醒神经元会损害随后的短期记忆,从而提供证据表明调节睡眠稳态的神经回路对行为可塑性很重要。总之,我们的数据表明了一个神经回路模型,该模型涉及不同群体的促醒神经元,其中一些参与睡眠和认知的稳态控制。