Animals modulate sleep in accordance with their internal and external environments. Metabolic cues are particularly potent regulators of sleep, allowing animals to alter their sleep timing and amount depending on food availability and foraging duration. The fruit fly, , suppresses sleep in response to acute food deprivation, presumably to forage for food. This process is dependent on a single pair of Lateral Horn Leucokinin (LHLK) neurons, that secrete the neuropeptide Leucokinin. These neurons signal to insulin producing cells and suppress sleep under periods of starvation. The identification of individual neurons that modulate sleep-metabolism interactions provides the opportunity to examine the cellular changes associated with sleep modulation. Here, we use single-cell sequencing of LHLK neurons to examine the transcriptional responses to starvation. We validate that a Patch-seq approach selectively isolates RNA from individual LHLK neurons. Single-cell CEL-Seq comparisons of LHLK neurons between fed and 24-hr starved flies identified 24 genes that are differentially expressed in accordance with starvation state. In total, 12 upregulated genes and 12 downregulated genes were identified. Gene-ontology analysis showed an enrichment for , a family of anti-microbial peptides, along with several transcripts with diverse roles in regulating cellular function. Targeted knockdown of differentially expressed genes identified multiple genes that function within LHLK neurons to regulate sleep-metabolism interactions. Functionally validated genes include an essential role for the E3 ubiquitin Ligase , the sorbitol dehydrogenase , as well as and in starvation-induced sleep suppression. Taken together, these findings provide a pipeline for identifying novel regulators of sleep-metabolism interactions within individual neurons.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.25.614841 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
September 2024
Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77840.
Animals modulate sleep in accordance with their internal and external environments. Metabolic cues are particularly potent regulators of sleep, allowing animals to alter their sleep timing and amount depending on food availability and foraging duration. The fruit fly, , suppresses sleep in response to acute food deprivation, presumably to forage for food.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
February 2019
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Jupiter, Florida, United States of America.
Dysregulation of sleep and feeding has widespread health consequences. Despite extensive epidemiological evidence for interactions between sleep and metabolic function, little is known about the neural or molecular basis underlying the integration of these processes. D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Dyn
March 2014
Development and Differentiation Department, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CBMSO), Madrid, Spain; Biology Department Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Background: The Drosophila central nervous system contains many types of neurons that are derived from a limited number of progenitors as evidenced in the ventral ganglion. The situation is much more complex in the developing brain. The main neuronal structures in the adult brain are generated in the larval neurogenesis, although the basic neuropil structures are already laid down during embryogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides
March 2011
Departamento de Biología, C/Darwin 1, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, E-28049 Madrid, Spain.
Previous studies have revealed leucokinin (LK) expression in the brain and ventral ganglion of Drosophila CNS. One pair of protocerebrum neurons located in the lateral horn area (LHLK) surrounds the peduncles of the mushroom bodies while two pairs of subesophageal neurons (SELKs) project extended processes to the tritocerebrum and through a cervical connection to the ventral ganglion. There, axons of eight or nine pairs of abdominal (ABLK) neurons leave the CNS through the abdominal nerves and processes connecting each other ipsilaterally and contralaterally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMech Dev
July 2007
Departamento de Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Cantoblanco, E 28049 Madrid, Spain.
One of the most widely studied phenomena in the establishment of neuronal identity is the determination of neurosecretory phenotype, in which cell-type-specific combinatorial codes direct distinct neurotransmitter or neuropeptide selection. However, neuronal types from divergent lineages may adopt the same neurosecretory phenotype, and it is unclear whether different classes of neurons use different or similar components to regulate shared features of neuronal identity. We have addressed this question by analyzing how differentiation of the Drosophila larval leucokinergic system, which is comprised of only four types of neurons, is regulated by factors known to affect expression of the FMRFamide neuropeptide.
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