Sleepy fruitflies get mellow
Kayser and his colleagues also studied the effects of reduced aggression on social behavior, specifically reproductive behavior and success. "We asked the simple question, does sleep deprivation affect sexual fitness?" The answer was yes: reduced aggressiveness of the sleep-deprived male flies clearly impaired their mating success when competing with non-sleepy males for females. Again, the molecule CDM rescued aggression and so also mating fitness in the sleep-deprived flies, while L-DOPA had no effect, reinforcing the link between aggression and octopamine signaling. "Not to over-anthropomorphize, but I think this reinforces the notion that aggression is important for certain things, such as mating, not just a negative behavior," noted Kayser. "In the fly, aggression can be important for carrying on a species' genetic code, and if you do things that impede aggression, it can have negative effects." Next steps include figuring out the neurobiological mechanisms that control the sleep-aggression link. "Our work suggests that somehow downstream of the sleep neuron pathway, there's a connection with aggression neurons, so we really want to understand what those are," said Kayser. "We have reason to think they're octopamine neurons, but we'd like to be able to identify exactly which neurons, and then how signals from the sleep centers are relayed to these aggression centers. The role of other monoamines, such as serotonin, remains to be explored as well." Much of the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in behaviors such as sleep and aggression have been found to be highly conserved across species, raising the possibility of translating the present research to humans. "I definitely see the potential for translation here, although it may be in the distant future," said senior author Amita Sehgal, PhD, a professor of Neuroscience and director of the Chronobiology Program. Sehgal is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator. "That translation is always in the back of our minds," added Kayser. "I have seen patients with dysregulation of aggressive behavior that's not specific to any single disorder. If this type of work can someday open the door to a different way to effectively control, treat, or modulate aggression, that would be a pretty fantastic thing. Right now, from a pharmacological perspective, we don't have a handle on more targeted interventions. I think that's a real attraction to studying aggression in the fly - to work on the cellular and molecular controls to understand the basic biology of this pathway so we can leverage this knowledge into something that is eventually clinically relevant."
INFORMATION:
Benjamin Mainwaring and Zhifeng Yue, both from Penn, are coauthors.
The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health (K08 NS090461, T32 HL07713) and HHMI.
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