Modulation of GABAA receptor desensitization uncouples sleep onset and maintenance in Drosophila
- 27 January 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Neuroscience
- Vol. 11 (3) , 354-359
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nn2046
Abstract
Many lines of evidence indicate that GABA and GABAA receptors make important contributions to human sleep regulation. Pharmacological manipulation of these receptors has differential effects on sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia. Here we show that sleep is regulated by GABA in Drosophila and that a mutant GABAA receptor, RdlA302S, specifically decreases sleep latency. The drug carbamazepine (CBZ) has the opposite effect on sleep; it increases sleep latency as well as decreasing sleep. Behavioral and physiological experiments indicated that RdlA302S mutant flies are resistant to the effects of CBZ on sleep latency and that mutant RDLA302S channels are resistant to the effects of CBZ on desensitization, respectively. These results suggest that this biophysical property of the channel, specifically channel desensitization, underlies the regulation of sleep latency in flies. These experiments uncouple the regulation of sleep latency from that of sleep duration and suggest that the kinetics of GABAA receptor signaling dictate sleep latency.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sleep in Drosophila is regulated by adult mushroom bodiesNature, 2006
- Shaw potassium channel genes inDrosophilaJournal of Neurobiology, 2005
- 'Am not I a fly like thee?' From genes in fruit flies to behavior in humansHuman Molecular Genetics, 2004
- Thymol, a constituent of thyme essential oil, is a positive allosteric modulator of human GABAA receptors and a homo‐oligomeric GABA receptor from Drosophila melanogasterBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2003
- Electrophysiological Correlates of Rest and Activity in Drosophila melanogasterCurrent Biology, 2002
- Functional characterization of the new human GABAA receptor mutation β3(R192H)Human Genetics, 2002
- The relative amount of cRNA coding for γ2 subunits affects stimulation by benzodiazepines in GABAA receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytesNeuropharmacology, 2002
- The GAL4 system as a tool for unravelling the mysteries of the Drosophila nervous systemCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1995
- GABA Receptor Minigene Rescues Insecticide Resistance Phenotypes inDrosophilaJournal of Molecular Biology, 1995
- α-amanitin-resistant D. melanogaster with an altered RNA polymerase IICell, 1979