Identification of a molecular basis for the juvenile sleep state

Across species, sleep in young animals is critical for normal brain maturation. The molecular determinants of early life sleep remain unknown. Through an RNAi-based screen, we identified a gene, , required for sleep maturation in , a transcription factor, coordinates an early developmental program t...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2020-03, Vol.9
Hauptverfasser: Chakravarti Dilley, Leela, Szuperak, Milan, Gong, Naihua N, Williams, Charlette E, Saldana, Ricardo Linares, Garbe, David S, Syed, Mubarak Hussain, Jain, Rajan, Kayser, Matthew S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Across species, sleep in young animals is critical for normal brain maturation. The molecular determinants of early life sleep remain unknown. Through an RNAi-based screen, we identified a gene, , required for sleep maturation in , a transcription factor, coordinates an early developmental program that prepares the brain to later execute high levels of juvenile adult sleep. PDM3 controls the wiring of wake-promoting dopaminergic (DA) neurites to a sleep-promoting region, and loss of PDM3 prematurely increases DA inhibition of the sleep center, abolishing the juvenile sleep state. RNA-Seq/ChIP-Seq and a subsequent modifier screen reveal that represses expression of the synaptogenesis gene to establish the appropriate window for DA innervation. These studies define the molecular cues governing sleep behavioral and circuit development, and suggest sleep disorders may be of neurodevelopmental origin.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.52676