Litcius/Paper detail

Starvation-induced sleep suppression requires the <i>Drosophila</i> brain nutrient sensor

Yangkyun Oh, Greg S. B. Suh

2023Journal of Neurogenetics22 citationsDOI

Abstract

brain, including diuretic hormone 44 (DH44)-, CN-, and cupcake-expressing neurons, detect circulating glucose levels in the internal milieu, regulate the insulin and glucagon secretion and promote food consumption. Food deprivation is known to reduce sleep duration, but a potential role mediated by the nutrient and hunger sensors in regulating sleep and locomotion activity remains unclear. Here, we show that DH44 neurons are involved in regulating starvation-induced sleep suppression, but CN neurons or cupcake neurons may not be involved in regulating starvation-induced sleep suppression or baseline sleep patterns. Inactivation of DH44 neurons resulted in normal daily sleep durations and patterns under fed conditions, whereas it ablated sleep reduction under starved conditions. Inactivation of CN neurons or cupcake neurons, which were proposed to be nutrient and hunger sensors in the fly brain, did not affect sleep patterns under both fed and starved conditions. We propose that the glucose-sensing DH44 neurons play an important role in mediating starvation-induced sleep reduction.

Topics & Concepts

Sleep (system call)StarvationSleep deprivationEndocrinologyBiologyDrosophila (subgenus)Internal medicineNutrient sensingDrosophila melanogasterFood intakeNeuroscienceCircadian rhythmCell biologyMedicineBiochemistrySignal transductionGeneOperating systemComputer scienceNeurobiology and Insect Physiology ResearchCircadian rhythm and melatoninInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior