Li Qiuling, Kellner David A, Hatch Hayden A M, Yumita Tomohiro, Sanchez Sandrine, Machold Robert P, Frank C Andrew, Stavropoulos Nicholas
Neuroscience Institute, Department of Neuroscience and Physiology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, United States of America.
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2017 May 30;13(5):e1006815. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006815. eCollection 2017 May.
Sleep is an ancient animal behavior that is regulated similarly in species ranging from flies to humans. Various genes that regulate sleep have been identified in invertebrates, but whether the functions of these genes are conserved in mammals remains poorly explored. Drosophila insomniac (inc) mutants exhibit severely shortened and fragmented sleep. Inc protein physically associates with the Cullin-3 (Cul3) ubiquitin ligase, and neuronal depletion of Inc or Cul3 strongly curtails sleep, suggesting that Inc is a Cul3 adaptor that directs the ubiquitination of neuronal substrates that impact sleep. Three proteins similar to Inc exist in vertebrates-KCTD2, KCTD5, and KCTD17-but are uncharacterized within the nervous system and their functional conservation with Inc has not been addressed. Here we show that Inc and its mouse orthologs exhibit striking biochemical and functional interchangeability within Cul3 complexes. Remarkably, KCTD2 and KCTD5 restore sleep to inc mutants, indicating that they can substitute for Inc in vivo and engage its neuronal targets relevant to sleep. Inc and its orthologs localize similarly within fly and mammalian neurons and can traffic to synapses, suggesting that their substrates may include synaptic proteins. Consistent with such a mechanism, inc mutants exhibit defects in synaptic structure and physiology, indicating that Inc is essential for both sleep and synaptic function. Our findings reveal that molecular functions of Inc are conserved through ~600 million years of evolution and support the hypothesis that Inc and its orthologs participate in an evolutionarily conserved ubiquitination pathway that links synaptic function and sleep regulation.
睡眠是一种古老的动物行为,从苍蝇到人类等物种对其调节方式相似。在无脊椎动物中已鉴定出多种调节睡眠的基因,但这些基因在哺乳动物中的功能是否保守仍有待深入研究。果蝇失眠症(inc)突变体表现出严重缩短和碎片化的睡眠。Inc蛋白与Cullin-3(Cul3)泛素连接酶在物理上相关联,并且神经元中Inc或Cul3的缺失会强烈减少睡眠,这表明Inc是一种Cul3衔接蛋白,可指导影响睡眠的神经元底物的泛素化。脊椎动物中存在三种与Inc相似的蛋白质——KCTD2、KCTD5和KCTD17——但它们在神经系统中的特性尚未明确,并且它们与Inc的功能保守性也未得到探讨。在这里,我们表明Inc及其小鼠直系同源物在Cul3复合物中表现出显著的生化和功能互换性。值得注意的是,KCTD2和KCTD5可恢复inc突变体的睡眠,这表明它们可以在体内替代Inc并作用于其与睡眠相关的神经元靶点。Inc及其直系同源物在果蝇和哺乳动物神经元中的定位相似,并且可以运输到突触,这表明它们的底物可能包括突触蛋白。与这种机制一致,inc突变体在突触结构和生理学上表现出缺陷,这表明Inc对睡眠和突触功能都至关重要。我们的研究结果表明,Inc在约6亿年的进化过程中分子功能保守,并支持以下假设:Inc及其直系同源物参与了一条将突触功能与睡眠调节联系起来的进化保守泛素化途径。