Researchers have found that two genes, originally known for their regulation of cell division, are required for normal slumber in fly models of sleep - Taranis and Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1).
"There's a lot we don't understand about sleep, especially when it comes to the protein machinery that initiates the process on the cellular level," said study author Kyunghee Koh, assistant professor of Neuroscience at the Farber Institute for Neurosciences at Thomas Jefferson University.
The researchers examined thousands of mutant fly lines and found a mutant, called Taranis, that slept a lot less than normal flies.
They found that Taranis bound to a known sleep regulator protein called Cyclin A. Their data suggest that Taranis and Cyclin A create a molecular machine that inactivates Cdk1, whose normal function is to suppress sleep and promote wakefulness.
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Previous research has shown that Cyclin A is expressed in a small number of neurons including a cluster of seven neurons on each side of the brain.
They saw a reduction of overall sleep when Taranis was knocked down only in these 14 neurons and when these same neurons are activated.
"We think this may be an arousal centre in the fly brain that Taranis helps inhibit during sleep," said Koh.
Although the Taranis protein has a human cousin, called the Trip-Br family of transcriptional regulators, it is yet unclear whether a similar system is at play in humans.