Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, 91125, USA; Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, 91125, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Oct 9;27(19):2984-2990.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.08.014. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Do all animals sleep? Sleep has been observed in many vertebrates, and there is a growing body of evidence for sleep-like states in arthropods and nematodes [1-5]. Here we show that sleep is also present in Cnidaria [6-8], an earlier-branching metazoan lineage. Cnidaria and Ctenophora are the first metazoan phyla to evolve tissue-level organization and differentiated cell types, such as neurons and muscle [9-15]. In Cnidaria, neurons are organized into a non-centralized radially symmetric nerve net [11, 13, 15-17] that nevertheless shares fundamental properties with the vertebrate nervous system: action potentials, synaptic transmission, neuropeptides, and neurotransmitters [15-20]. It was reported that cnidarian soft corals [21] and box jellyfish [22, 23] exhibit periods of quiescence, a pre-requisite for sleep-like states, prompting us to ask whether sleep is present in Cnidaria. Within Cnidaria, the upside-down jellyfish Cassiopea spp. displays a quantifiable pulsing behavior, allowing us to perform long-term behavioral tracking. Monitoring of Cassiopea pulsing activity for consecutive days and nights revealed behavioral quiescence at night that is rapidly reversible, as well as a delayed response to stimulation in the quiescent state. When deprived of nighttime quiescence, Cassiopea exhibited decreased activity and reduced responsiveness to a sensory stimulus during the subsequent day, consistent with homeostatic regulation of the quiescent state. Together, these results indicate that Cassiopea has a sleep-like state, supporting the hypothesis that sleep arose early in the metazoan lineage, prior to the emergence of a centralized nervous system.
所有动物都需要睡眠吗?许多脊椎动物都有睡眠现象,越来越多的证据表明节肢动物和线虫也有类似睡眠的状态[1-5]。在这里,我们表明刺胞动物(刺胞动物门)[6-8]也存在睡眠,刺胞动物是分支较早的后生动物谱系。刺胞动物和栉水母动物门是最早进化出组织水平组织和分化细胞类型(如神经元和肌肉)的后生动物门[9-15]。在刺胞动物中,神经元组织成一个非中心化的辐射对称神经网[11、13、15-17],但与脊椎动物神经系统有共同的基本特性:动作电位、突触传递、神经肽和神经递质[15-20]。有报道称刺胞动物软珊瑚[21]和箱型水母[22、23]表现出静止期,这是类似睡眠状态的先决条件,这促使我们询问刺胞动物是否存在睡眠。在刺胞动物中,倒立水母 Cassiopea spp. 表现出可量化的脉冲行为,使我们能够进行长期行为跟踪。连续几天和几夜监测 Cassiopea 的脉冲活动,发现夜间出现行为静止,这种状态可迅速逆转,而且在静止状态下对刺激的反应延迟。当剥夺夜间静止期时,Cassiopea 在随后的白天表现出活动减少和对感觉刺激的反应性降低,这与静止状态的稳态调节一致。这些结果表明,Cassiopea 有类似睡眠的状态,支持睡眠在后生动物谱系中很早就出现的假说,早于中央神经系统的出现。