Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
Sleep. 2019 Jul 8;42(7). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsz102.
Sleep optimizes waking behavior, however, waking experience may also influence sleep. We used the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster to investigate the relationship between visual experience and sleep in wild-type and mutant flies. We found that the classical visual mutant, optomotor-blind (omb), which has undeveloped horizontal system/vertical system (HS/VS) motion-processing cells and are defective in motion and visual salience perception, showed dramatically reduced and less consolidated sleep compared to wild-type flies. In contrast, optogenetic activation of the HS/VS motion-processing neurons in wild-type flies led to an increase in sleep following the activation, suggesting an increase in sleep pressure. Surprisingly, exposing wild-type flies to repetitive motion stimuli for extended periods did not increase sleep pressure. However, we observed that exposing flies to more complex image sequences from a movie led to more consolidated sleep, particularly when images were randomly shuffled through time. Our results suggest that specific forms of visual experience that involve motion circuits and complex, nonrepetitive imagery, drive sleep need in Drosophila.
睡眠优化了觉醒行为,然而,觉醒体验也可能影响睡眠。我们使用黑腹果蝇 Drosophila melanogaster 来研究野生型和突变型果蝇之间视觉体验和睡眠之间的关系。我们发现经典的视觉突变体 optomotor-blind (omb),其水平系统/垂直系统 (HS/VS) 运动处理细胞未发育,并且在运动和视觉显著性感知方面存在缺陷,与野生型果蝇相比,睡眠明显减少且不巩固。相比之下,光遗传学激活野生型果蝇的 HS/VS 运动处理神经元会导致激活后睡眠增加,表明睡眠压力增加。令人惊讶的是,长时间暴露于重复运动刺激并不会增加野生型果蝇的睡眠压力。然而,我们观察到,使果蝇暴露于来自电影的更复杂的图像序列会导致更巩固的睡眠,特别是当图像随时间随机打乱时。我们的结果表明,涉及运动回路和复杂、非重复图像的特定形式的视觉体验会促使果蝇产生睡眠需求。