Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA; Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Curr Biol. 2019 May 20;29(10):1728-1734.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.04.039. Epub 2019 May 9.
Sleep is fundamental to animal survival but is a vulnerable state that also limits how much time can be devoted to critical wake-dependent activities [1]. Although many animals are day-active and sleep at night, they exhibit a midday nap, or "siesta," that can vary in intensity and is usually more prominent on warm days. In humans, the balance between maintaining the wake state or sleeping during the day has important health implications [2], but the mechanisms underlying this dynamic regulation are poorly understood. Using the well-established Drosophila melanogaster animal model to study sleep [3], we identify a new wake-sleep regulator that we term daywake (dyw). dyw encodes a juvenile hormone-binding protein [4] that functions in neurons as a day-specific anti-siesta gene, with little effect on sleep levels during the nighttime or in the absence of light. Remarkably, dyw expression is stimulated in trans via cold-enhanced splicing of the dmpi8 intron [5] from the reverse-oriented but slightly overlapping period (per) clock gene [6]. The functionally integrated dmpi8-dyw genetic unit operates as a "behavioral temperate acclimator" by increasingly counterbalancing siesta-promoting pathways as daily temperatures become cooler and carry reduced risks from daytime heat exposure. While daily patterns of when animals are awake and when they sleep are largely scheduled by the circadian timing system, dyw implicates a less recognized class of modulatory wake-sleep regulators that primarily function to enhance flexibility in wake-sleep preference, a behavioral plasticity that is commonly observed in animals during the midday, raising the possibility of shared mechanisms.
睡眠是动物生存的基础,但它是一种脆弱的状态,也限制了可以用于关键觉醒依赖活动的时间[1]。尽管许多动物是白天活动,晚上睡觉,但它们会有中午小睡,或“午休”,其强度可以变化,通常在温暖的天气中更为明显。在人类中,维持清醒状态或白天睡眠的平衡对健康有重要影响[2],但这种动态调节的机制还了解甚少。我们使用已建立的黑腹果蝇动物模型来研究睡眠[3],发现了一种新的清醒-睡眠调节剂,我们称之为 daywake(dyw)。dyw 编码一种保幼激素结合蛋白[4],在神经元中作为一种特定于白天的抗午休基因发挥作用,对夜间或没有光照时的睡眠水平影响不大。值得注意的是,dyw 的表达通过冷增强拼接 dmpi8 内含子[5]从反向定向但略有重叠的 period(per)时钟基因[6]进行转录调节。功能整合的 dmpi8-dyw 遗传单元作为“行为温度适应器”运作,随着每日温度的降低,越来越多地抵消促进午休的途径,因为白天热暴露的风险降低。虽然动物何时清醒和何时睡眠的日常模式主要由昼夜节律计时系统安排,但 dyw 暗示了一类较少被认识的调节清醒-睡眠调节剂,它们主要作用是增强清醒-睡眠偏好的灵活性,这种行为可塑性在动物中常见于中午,这增加了共享机制的可能性。