Current Biology
Volume 20, Issue 13, 13 July 2010, Pages 1209-1215
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Clock and cycle Limit Starvation-Induced Sleep Loss in Drosophila

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Summary

Neural systems controlling the vital functions of sleep and feeding in mammals are tightly interconnected: sleep deprivation promotes feeding, whereas starvation suppresses sleep. Here we show that starvation in Drosophila potently suppresses sleep, suggesting that these two homeostatically regulated behaviors are also integrated in flies. The sleep-suppressing effect of starvation is independent of the mushroom bodies, a previously identified sleep locus in the fly brain, and therefore is regulated by distinct neural circuitry. The circadian clock genes Clock (Clk) and cycle (cyc) are critical for proper sleep suppression during starvation. However, the sleep suppression is independent of light cues and of circadian rhythms as shown by the fact that starved period mutants sleep like wild-type flies. By selectively targeting subpopulations of Clk-expressing neurons, we localize the observed sleep phenotype to the dorsally located circadian neurons. These findings show that Clk and cyc act during starvation to modulate the conflict of whether flies sleep or search for food.

Highlights

Drosophila strike an optimal balance between sleep and food-seeking behavior ► The circadian genes Clk and cyc modulate sleep in response to metabolic needs ► Dorsally located Clk-expressing neurons promote sleep during food deprivation ► Clk regulates sleep and circadian rhythms through independent neural mechanisms.

MOLNEURO

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These authors contributed equally to this work