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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

A paradoxical kind of sleep In Drosophila melanogaster

Bruno van Swinderen

Prof.

University of Queensland

Schedule
Thursday, April 30, 2020

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Schedule

Thursday, April 30, 2020

10:00 AM Europe/London

Host: Cortex Club

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Cortex Club

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

The dynamic nature of sleep in most animals suggests distinct stages which serve different functions. Genetic sleep induction methods in animal models provide a powerful way to disambiguate these stages and functions, although behavioural methods alone are insufficient to accurately identify what kind of sleep is being engaged. In Drosophila, activation of the dorsal fan-shaped body (dFB) promotes sleep, but it remains unclear what kind of sleep this is, how the rest of the fly brain is behaving, or if any specific sleep functions are being achieved. Here, we developed a method to record calcium activity from thousands of neurons across a volume of the fly brain during dFB-induced sleep, and we compared this to the effects of a sleep-promoting drug. We found that drug-induced spontaneous sleep decreased brain activity and connectivity, whereas dFB sleep was not different from wakefulness. Paradoxically, dFB-induced sleep was found to be even deeper than drug- induced sleep. When we probed the sleeping fly brain with salient visual stimuli, we found that the activity of visually-responsive neurons was blocked by dFB activation, confirming a disconnect from the external environment. Prolonged optogenetic dFB activation nevertheless achieved a significant sleep function, by correcting visual attention defects brought on by sleep deprivation. These results suggest that dFB activation promotes a distinct form of sleep in Drosophila, where brain activity and connectivity remain similar to wakefulness, but responsiveness to external sensory stimuli is profoundly suppressed.

Topics

brain connectivitycalcium activitydorsal fan-shaped bodydrosophiladrosophila melanogasteroptogeneticssensory stimulisleepsleep deprivationvisual attention

About the Speaker

Bruno van Swinderen

Prof.

University of Queensland

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.vanswinderenlab.com

@vanswinderenlab

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/vanswinderenlab

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