| Literature DB >> 31537465 |
Sabine Reichert1, Oriol Pavón Arocas1, Jason Rihel2.
Abstract
Sleep pressure increases during wake and dissipates during sleep, but the molecules and neurons that measure homeostatic sleep pressure remain poorly understood. We present a pharmacological assay in larval zebrafish that generates short-term increases in wakefulness followed by sustained rebound sleep after washout. The intensity of global neuronal activity during drug-induced wakefulness predicted the amount of subsequent rebound sleep. Whole-brain mapping with the neuronal activity marker phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (pERK) identified preoptic Galanin (Galn)-expressing neurons as selectively active during rebound sleep, and the relative induction of galn transcripts was predictive of total rebound sleep time. Galn is required for sleep homeostasis, as galn mutants almost completely lacked rebound sleep following both pharmacologically induced neuronal activity and physical sleep deprivation. These results suggest that Galn plays a key role in responding to sleep pressure signals derived from neuronal activity and functions as an output arm of the vertebrate sleep homeostat.Entities:
Keywords: galanin; sleep deprivation; sleep homeostasis; sleep pressure; zebrafish
Year: 2019 PMID: 31537465 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2019.08.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173