Sleep induced by mechanosensory stimulation provides cognitive and health benefits in Drosophila.

Sleep

Department of Neuroscience and the Farber Institute for Neurosciences, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sleep is influenced by various factors, and studies show that gentle rocking and vibration can help induce sleep in not just humans, but also in mice and fruit flies (Drosophila).
  • Researchers investigated how vibration-induced sleep (VIS) affects cognitive functions like learning and memory in fruit flies, particularly in a courtship conditioning test, and examined its impact on synaptic health.
  • The study found that VIS improved learning performance, reduced synaptic clutter, and aided sleep in fruit flies with Alzheimer's disease by decreasing harmful protein levels associated with the condition.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Sleep is a complex phenomenon regulated by various factors, including sensory input. Anecdotal observations have suggested that gentle rocking helps babies fall asleep, and experimental studies have verified that rocking promotes sleep in both humans and mice. Recent studies have expanded this understanding, demonstrating that gentle vibration also induces sleep in Drosophila. Natural sleep serves multiple functions, including learning and memory, synaptic downscaling, and reduction of harmful substances associated with neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we investigated whether vibration-induced sleep (VIS) provides similar cognitive and health benefits in Drosophila.

Methods: We administered gentle vibration to flies that slept very little due to a forced activation of wake-promoting neurons and investigated how the vibration influenced learning and memory in the courtship conditioning paradigm. Additionally, we examined the effects of VIS on synaptic downscaling by counting synaptic varicosities of select neurons. Finally, we determined whether vibration could induce sleep in Drosophila models of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and suppress the accumulation of Amyloid β (Aβ) and Tubulin Associated Unit (TAU).

Results: VIS enhanced performance in a courtship conditioning paradigm and reduced the number of synaptic varicosities in select neurons. Moreover, vibration improved sleep in Drosophila models of AD, reducing Aβ and TAU levels.

Conclusions: Mechanosensory stimulation offers a promising noninvasive avenue for enhancing sleep, potentially providing associated cognitive and health benefits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsae226DOI Listing

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