Neuropeptidergic circuit modulation of developmental sleep inDrosophila
Abstract
Sleep-wakefulness regulation dynamically evolves along development in flies, fish, and humans. While the mechanisms regulating sleep in adults are relatively well understood, little is known about their counterparts in early developmental stages. Here, we report a neuropeptidergic circuitry that modulates sleep in developingDrosophilalarvae. Through an unbiased screen, we identified the neuropeptide Hugin and its receptor PK2-R1 as critical regulators of larval sleep. Our data suggest that HugPC neurons secrete Hugin peptides to activate insulin-producing cells (IPCs), which express a Hugin receptor PK2-R1. IPCs, in turn, releaseDrosophilainsulin-like peptides (Dilps) to regulate sleep. We further show that the Hugin/PK2-R1 axis is dispensable for adult sleep control. Our findings thus reveal the neuromodulatory circuitry regulating larval sleep, highlighting differential impacts of the same modulatory axis on developmental sleep and adult sleep.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.