Abstract
Sickness-induced sleep is a behavior conserved across species that promotes recovery from illness, yet the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we show that interleukin-6-like cytokine signaling from the Drosophila gut to brain glial cells regulates sleep. Under healthy conditions, this pathway promotes wakefulness. However, elevated gut cytokine signaling in response to oxidative stress – triggered by immune and inflammatory responses in the intestine – induces sleep. The cytokines Unpaired 2 and -3 are upregulated by oxidative stress in enteroendocrine cells and activate JAK-STAT signaling in glial cells, including those of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). This activity maintains elevated sleep during oxidative-stress-induced intestinal disturbances, suggesting that the JAK-STAT pathway in glia inhibits wake-promoting signaling to facilitate sleep-dependent restoration under these conditions. We find that the enteric peptide Allatostatin A (AstA) enhances wakefulness, and during intestinal oxidative stress, gut-derived Unpaired 2/3 inhibits AstA receptor expression in BBB glia, thereby sustaining an elevated sleep state during gut inflammation or illness. Taken together, our work identifies a gut-to-glial communication pathway that couples sleep with intestinal homeostasis and disease, enhancing sleep during intestinal sickness, and contributes to our understanding of how sleep disturbances arise from gastrointestinal disturbances.
Introduction
Sleep is a conserved behavior essential for physical health and mental well-being. This process maintains physiological balance and promotes recovery from illnesses and other stressors1,2. In healthy states, animals exhibit rhythmic periods of wakefulness and activity, but their sleep patterns significantly increase during illness. This adaptive behavior is related to the fundamental role of sleep in the recovery process, allowing the body to conserve energy and allocate resources towards eliminating pathogens and repairing tissue damage. Sleep patterns are generated by neural circuits within the brain. These circuits engage in complex interactions involving diverse brain regions, neurotransmitters, and signaling pathways to regulate the cycles of sleep and wakefulness3,4. For sleep to be effectively modulated during illness, there must be a dynamic interaction between the physiological states of the body’s organs and these central sleep-regulatory circuits. However, the signals that mediate this communication and the mechanisms by which they modulate sleep during health and disease remain poorly defined.
Sickness-induced sleep, a behavior conserved across species including mammals and flies5,6, is influenced by cytokines, which are key mediators of immune and inflammatory responses1,2. Cytokines such as Interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) are expressed in the healthy mammalian brain in regions that are implicated in sleep regulation, and their circulating levels change during the normal sleep-wake cycle, peaking during the sleep phase. Furthermore, these factors’ effects on sleep appear to be dose-dependent, as low levels of IL-1 can enhance sleep, whereas higher doses can inhibit sleep, indicating a dual functionality. Since immune responses alter the expression of these cytokines, they have been hypothesized to act as “somnogens” that promote sleep during times of infection or illness. However, the connection between sleep and immune function is bidirectional, since sleep deprivation in mammals has been linked to increased inflammatory response via IL-1 and TNFα2. In the fruit fly Drosophila, sleep deprivation also seems to influence TNFα in astrocyte-like cells to regulate homeostatic sleep responses that enable sleep rebound after deprivation7. However, the effect of these cytokines on sleep has mostly been linked to their central expression and function within the central nervous system (CNS), while the coupling of cytokines produced by peripheral tissues to sleep-regulatory systems within the brain remains poorly understood.
Disorders affecting the gastrointestinal tract can lead to sleep disturbances8, which are also associated with virtually all mental illnesses9–11. Conditions including depression, anxiety, and disturbed sleep are frequently observed in individuals with gut inflammation, and the gut microbiome has also been linked to sleep quality and mental health8,12–14. These associations suggest a strong connection between gut health and sleep. For changes in gut status to bring about behavioral changes, the gut must sense its state of health, damage, or presence of pathogens and release signals that lead to altered cellular function within the brain. This gut-to-brain signaling is mediated in large part by hormonal factors released from specialized endocrine cells of the gut, the enteroendocrine cells (EECs)15,16. Like the mammalian intestine, the Drosophila gut produces numerous diverse hormones from specialized EECs17–22. Some of these gut hormones are released in response to nutritional intake, and they diet-dependently modulate sleep patterns and arousability through communication with neuroendocrine centers and brain circuits23–25.
In the fly, enteric infection or damage leads to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the increased expression of the IL-6-like inflammatory cytokines Unpaired 2 and -3 (Upd2/3) in the absorptive enterocytes, a response required for local gut regeneration26,27. These cytokine factors signal through their receptor Domeless (Dome) to activate the JAK/STAT signaling pathway, which is important for both immune function and metabolism in flies, demonstrating a conserved function of cytokine action in this species. While the three related cytokines, Upd1, Upd2, and Upd3, all signal through Dome, Upd2 and in particular Upd3 are IL-6-like cytokines mainly triggered by infection and are directly linked with cellular immune responses28–30. As in mammals, cytokines are also produced centrally within the Drosophila brain, and neuronal Upd1 acts in a leptin-like manner to regulate feeding31, a behavior that is also linked with sleep4. Peripheral cytokine signaling has also been shown to modulate sleep in this species, where the fat tissue releases Upd2 to reflect adequate nutrition, and this signal modulates sleep32. Furthermore, Unpaired cytokines have been implicated in the modulation of feeding behavior through effects on glial cells33. Glial cells, including those making up the blood-brain barrier (BBB), have recently gained attention for their role in sleep regulation in both flies and mammals34–37. Neurons in the CNS are separated from the circulatory system by the BBB, a selectively semi-permeable cell layer38, which presents a challenge for peripheral hormones to enter and signal to neurons within the brain. However, glial cells within the BBB are ideally positioned to receive and integrate systemic signals from peripheral organs and modulate neuronal function, thereby relaying peripheral information into the brain.
Here, we demonstrate Upd2 and Upd3 cytokine signaling from endocrine EECs in the intestine in Drosophila. Our findings show that Upd2/3 signaling from the EECs to BBB glial cells, plays a dual role in sleep regulation. Under normal, healthy conditions, EEC-derived Unpaired signaling sustains wakefulness, whereas in response to oxidative stress that leads to gut inflammation, elevated Unpaired signaling instead promotes sleep. Stress-induced EEC-derived Upd2/3 activates the JAK-STAT pathway in glial cells at the blood-brain interface and adjusts sleep through this activation based on intestinal homeostasis and levels of inflammatory signaling from the gut. Our results suggest that gut-derived Unpaired signaling influences sleep regulation through glial gating of wake-promoting AstA-mediated signals, thus linking intestinal health with CNS-dependent behaviors. These results identify a gut-brain connection by which gut disease impacts sleep regulation.
Results
Gut-derived Unpaired cytokine signaling regulates sleep
To investigate whether cytokine signaling from the gut regulates sleep, we silenced the expression of upd2 and upd3 in the EECs, which are a principal endocrine cell type in the gut that releases signals with systemic effects and constitutes the functional basis of gut-brain signaling. Using voilà-GAL4 (a driver that targets all EECs) to drive RNAi in EECs in conjunction with Tub-GAL80ts (hereafter referred to as voilà>) for temperature-induced RNAi induction exclusively in the adult stage to prevent developmental effects, we observed significant knockdown of the main IL-6 cytokine, upd330, in dissected adult female midguts (Fig. 1a), demonstrating that upd3 is expressed in EECs under normal homeostatic conditions. To eliminate potential neuron-derived phenotypes, we employed R57C10-GAL80, a form of nSyb-GAL80 that effectively inhibits neuronal GAL4 activity, in combination with Tub-GAL80ts and voilà-GAL425,39. To evaluate the effectiveness of this temperature-sensitive EEC-specific driver (referred to as EEC> hereafter) upon adult-restricted induction, we examined midgut upd2 and upd3 transcript levels and observed significant knockdown of both cytokines, which was reproduced with a second independent RNAi line targeting upd3 (Fig. 1b). Additionally, GFP expressed under the control of an upd3-GAL4 driver containing upd3 enhancer sequences, was apparent in midgut EECs, marked by staining against the EEC fate determinant Prospero (Fig. 1c). These results show that EECs of the adult female midgut are a source of Upd2 and Upd3 under normal conditions.
We then explored whether these EEC-derived cytokines govern sleep under such normal conditions, given the known role of cytokines in both healthy and inflammatory states. We found that the knockdown of the two main immune-related cytokines, upd2 or upd3 using voilà> increased the amount of time animals spent asleep (defined as a period of inactivity lasting at least five minutes), especially during the day (Fig. S1a-c). This phenotype was reproducible using the more restricted EEC> driver that includes R57C10-GAL80, suggesting that the EEC-specific loss of these cytokines promotes sleep with pronounced effects during daytimes when females are typically active (Fig. 1d-f). This outcome was not attributable to off-target effects, as two independent RNAi lines targeting the main IL-6-like cytokine, upd3, produced a similar phenotype or effects of the RNAi transgenes themselves (Fig. 1d-f and S1d-f). Animals lacking EEC-derived Unpaired signaling also exhibited shorter motion bouts (periods of activity; Fig. 1g and S1g). However, the EEC-specific knockdown of upd2 or upd3 did not reduce motion-bout activity (the intensity of activity during wake periods), implying that the lack of gut cytokine signaling did not reduce general activity when the animals were awake (Fig. 1h and S1h), and these effects do not arise from RNAi transgene insertions themselves (Fig. S1i,j). These observations suggest a direct influence of gut-derived Upd2 and Upd3 on sleep rather than a broader impact on general activity levels. Given that sleep and feeding are mutually exclusive behaviors, we measured feeding. We did not detect significant alterations in feeding behavior as a consequence of upd2 or upd3 knockdown in EECs over a 24-hour period using the automated FLIC system (Fig. S1k), nor did we observe an effect of EEC-specific upd3 overexpression on food consumption via a dye assay (Fig. S1l). Furthermore, EEC-specific upd3 knockdown did not affect the animals’ metabolic state as reflected in their levels of stored triacylglyceride (TAG) (Fig. S1m). Therefore, the sleep phenotype exhibited by animals with EEC-specific upd2/3 knockdown is not associated with changes in metabolism, appetite or feeding behavior.
To further explore the role of Upd2 and Upd3 in sleep regulation, we made use of deletion mutations that disrupt either both upd2 and upd3 (upd2,311) or upd3 alone (upd311). Both mutants exhibited a pronounced increase in sleep (Fig. 1i-k), with strong effects on daytime sleep phenocopying the RNAi-mediated knockdown in the EECs. We additionally disrupted the upd2 or upd3 genes specifically in the EECs using somatic tissue-specific CRISPR-mediated deletion. EEC-specific CRISPR-mediated knockout of upd2 or upd3, induced by UAS-controlled gRNA pairs designed to excise portions of each gene’s coding sequence, led to significantly elevated sleep (Fig. 1l-n), further reinforcing these cytokines’ role in sleep modulation. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that Upd2 and Upd3 expressed by EECs are important modulators of diurnal sleep patterns in Drosophila under normal homeostatic conditions.
Glial cytokine JAK-STAT signaling regulates sleep
To identify the CNS targets of EEC-derived Upd2/3 cytokine signaling by which they regulate sleep, we examined the effects of targeted knockdown of the Upd2/3 JAK-STAT-linked receptor dome in neurons or glia, the two main cell types in the CNS. Pan-neuronal dome knockdown using the driver R57C10-GAL425 did not significantly alter daytime sleep in adult females (Fig. 2a), contrary to the sleep increase observed upon loss of upd2 or upd3 in EECs (Fig. 1). This suggests that neurons are not the targets by which gut Unpaired cytokine signaling regulates sleep. In contrast, knockdown of dome in glial cells using the pan-glial driver repo-GAL4 (repo>) resulted in a pronounced increase in daytime sleep (Fig. 2a), similar to the phenotype observed upon EEC-specific loss of Unpaired cytokines. To substantiate this observation further, we silenced dome expression in glia using three independent RNAi lines, which all increased sleep with strong induction of sleep during the day, effectively ruling out any off-target or transgene-background effects (Fig. 2b-d and S2a-e). Additionally, animals with glial dome knockdown displayed shorter daytime motion-bout lengths, suggesting reduced periods of wakefulness (Fig. 2e and S2f), without exhibiting decreased activity during these bouts (Fig. 2f and S2g), phenocopying the effects of upd2/3 knockdown in EECs (Fig. 1g,h). We also assessed whether glial-specific dome knockdown might affect feeding and energy storage, but we observed no reduction in food intake (Fig. S2h), and no changes in TAG levels were detected (Fig. S2i). These findings collectively argue that augmented sleep resulting from impaired JAK-STAT signaling in glia is not due to a general decline in activity but rather represents a specific regulation of sleep itself.
To directly assess the functional Unpaired-mediated communication between the gut and glial cells, we manipulated upd2 and upd3 in EECs of animals carrying a ubiquitous transgenic JAK-STAT reporter (10xSTAT-GFP)40. Knockdown of either upd2 or upd3 in the EECs led to a marked decrease in JAK-STAT reporter activity within Repo-positive glial cells under normal conditions (Fig. 2g,h), suggesting that Upd2/3-mediated signaling from the EECs to the brain’s glial cells activates JAK-STAT signaling. Taken together this suggests that gut-to-glia communication via Upd2 and Upd3 modulates diurnal sleep patterns through glial JAK-STAT activation and that these cytokines are required for the maintenance of wakefulness during the day under healthy conditions.
Oxidative stress modulates sleep through gut-derived cytokine signaling
Having established the significance of gut-derived Unpaired cytokines in maintaining wakefulness under normal conditions, we next explored their role in sleep-regulation during gut disturbances that trigger immune and inflammatory responses. Infection or inflammation in the gut leads to increased levels of ROS, causing local intestinal oxidative stress26,27. To probe the effects of enteric ROS on sleep and cytokine signaling, we induced oxidative stress in the gut by feeding animals food containing 1% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for 20 hours. We asked whether intestinal oxidative stress might elevate the levels of Upd2 and Upd3 in the gut and found substantial upregulation of upd3 expression in ROS-challenged dissected midguts of adult females (Fig. 3a). This effect mirrored the upregulation observed with EEC-specific overexpression of upd3, indicating that it reflects physiologically relevant production of Upd3 by the gut in response to oxidative stress. Although oxidative stress also promoted upd2 expression, albeit to a lesser extent, this effect was not modulated by simultaneous EEC-specific upd3 overexpression.
We next investigated whether sleep is modulated by intestinal oxidative stress and if Unpaired signaling from EEC is required for this response. We induced intestinal oxidative stress by exposing animals to a diet supplemented with H2O2 at Zeitgeber Time 0 (ZT0), the onset of the light phase in a 12-hour light/dark cycle. Exposure to a lower H2O2 concentration (0.1%) incrementally increased daytime sleep amount over successive days (Fig. 3b). In contrast, a higher H2O2 concentration (1%) triggered an immediate augmentation of daytime sleep (Fig. 3c). These observations suggest dose-dependent modulation of sleep by intestinal oxidative stress. Since 1% H2O2 feeding induced robust responses both in upd3 expression and in sleep behavior, we asked whether gut-derived Unpaired signaling might be essential for the observed ROS-induced sleep modulation. Indeed, EEC-specific RNAi targeting upd2 or upd3 abolished the sleep response to 1% H2O2 feeding. These animals with EEC-specific knockdown of upd2 or upd3 did not exhibit increased daytime sleep in response to the induction of oxidative stress in the intestine, even over two consecutive days exposed to 1% H2O2-containing diet (Fig. 3d,e). The specificity of this response was corroborated by three independent RNAi lines targeting upd3, negating the possibility of RNAi off-target effects (Fig. 3d,e), and the loss of response to ROS was also not attributable to the transgenes themselves (Fig. S3a-d). Intriguingly, animals lacking upd3 in the EECs not only did not increase their sleep under oxidative stress but indeed appear to lose nighttime sleep in response to enteric stress.
We next tested whether this sleep phenotype might be associated with general physiological processes rendering animals lacking EEC Unpaired signaling more susceptible to ROS-induced damage. However, when we assessed survival on 1% H2O2-containing food, animals with upd2 or upd3 knockdown in EECs displayed no additional sensitivity to oxidative stress, compared to controls (Fig. 3f). This lack of effect indicates that the loss of EEC-derived Unpaired signaling specifically leads to an impaired behavioral sleep response to intestinal oxidative stress, rather than to compromised physiological processes that would make the animals more vulnerable to oxidative stress insults. We also examined whether animals lacking EEC-derived Unpaired signaling exhibit normal behavioral responses to other conditions that modulate sleep, which would suggest a specific requirement for this signaling in responding to intestinal oxidative stress. Animals typically suppress their sleep in response to nutritional deprivation, a behavior conserved across species that is believed to facilitate food-seeking activities and that is also influenced by EEC-mediated hormone signaling25,41. Animals lacking EEC-derived upd3 suppressed their sleep similar to controls in response to starvation, indicating a normal sleep response to nutritional stress (Fig. S3e-g).
Although we observed behavioral phenotypes with manipulations of either upd2 or upd3, suggesting that both are required for normal function, Upd2 and Upd3 likely function at least partially redundantly or additively in their regulation of sleep, as is the case for other processes42. Moreover, RNAi effects do not result in a complete loss of function. Therefore, we speculated that a stronger disruption and combined knockout of both upd2 and upd3 might lead to even more pronounced phenotypes. We therefore tested the upd3Δ deletions and the double upd2,3Δ double deletion mutants. Whereas upd3Δ and upd2,3Δ mutants exhibited increased baseline sleep under homeostatic conditions, these animals not only failed to increase their sleep in response to oxidative stress but indeed showed a strong reduction in daytime and nighttime sleep under oxidative-stress conditions (Fig. 3g-i). These results suggest that contrary to its role in promoting wakefulness during normal homeostatic conditions, the enhanced ROS-induced Unpaired signaling from EECs helps sustain a higher sleep level during periods of oxidative stress. This indicates a dual functionality of Unpaired cytokine signaling, in which low Unpaired signaling promotes wakefulness under normal conditions, whereas higher ROS-induced Unpaired signaling facilitates a shift to restorative sleep during intestinal stress.
We therefore investigated whether higher levels of Unpaired signaling from the gut, comparable to the level produced during oxidative stress, could enhance sleep in the absence of exogenous stressors. We analyzed the effect of upd3 overexpression in EECs, which drives expression of midgut upd3 to levels similar to those induced by 1% H2O2 feeding (Fig. 3a). Consistent with a model in which high levels of Upd3, which would occur during high levels of intestinal oxidative stress, promotes daytime sleep, animals overexpressing upd3 in the EECs exhibited increased sleep during the day, even in the absence of H2O2-induced oxidative stress (Fig. 3j,k). These animals further increased their sleep in response to H2O2-induced enteric oxidative stress, unlike those lacking gut-derived upd3 (Fig. 3d,e), suggesting they are able to mount an additional ROS-induced Unpaired signaling response on top of the overexpression-induced levels. After animals were switched back to normal food after one day of oxidative stress, both control animals and those with EEC-specific upd3 overexpression exhibited even more sleep than during the previous day under oxidative-stress conditions (Fig. 3j,k). This suggests a robust recovery sleep response following the insult, likely mediated by Unpaired signaling, since the effect is more pronounced with upd3 overexpression. Taken together our results show that control animals increase their sleep during oxidative stress, likely as an adaptive recovery response. In contrast, animals with EEC-specific knockdown of unpaired cytokines do not exhibit this ROS-induced sleep response; instead, they experience sleep loss during such stress conditions. This suggests that while keeping the animal awake during normal healthy conditions, ROS-induced gut Unpaired signaling temporarily suppress these wake-promoting effects, leading to more sleep.
EEC-derived Unpaired cytokine signaling activates glial JAK-STAT under oxidative stress
To investigate whether oxidative stress enhances glial JAK-STAT signaling and if this enhancement is mediated by gut-derived Upd2 and Upd3, we assessed glial JAK-STAT reporter activity using the dual-color TransTimer system, which provides temporal information about JAK-STAT signaling43. In this system, active STAT promotes the expression of a construct encoding a short-lived destabilized GFP (dGFP, half-life ∼2 hours) and a long-lived RFP (half-life ∼20 hours) separated by a 2A peptide (6xSTAT-dGFP:2A::RFP); a higher ratio of GFP to RFP in a given cell reflects more recent JAK-STAT signaling. We explored whether JAK-STAT signaling responds dynamically to intestinal oxidative stress and assessed two daily time points. We observed no circadian changes between ZT0 (lights on) and ZT12 (lights off) in the superficial layer of cells surrounding the brain (Fig. 4a,b), which is composed of glia44. However, we observed a significant increase in GFP signal at ZT0 in animals fed for 20 hours with 1% H2O2-containing food, indicating recent JAK-STAT activity in the surface glia. Next, we investigated whether gut-derived Unpaired signaling is responsible for this upregulation by combining the 10xSTAT-GFP reporter with knockdown of upd2 or upd3 in the EECs. Whereas glial JAK-STAT reporter activity was upregulated by oxidative stress (20 hours 1%-H2O2 feeding) in control animals, this response was abolished in animals with EEC-specific knockdown of upd2 or upd3, indicating that this response is dependent on these EEC-derived cytokines (Fig. 4c,d). Since in this case we used voilá> without pan-neuronal R57C10-GAL80 to drive knockdown in EECs, we measured the expression of upd2 and upd3 in heads to check for any unintended neuronal effects that might contribute to the observed effect on glial JAK-STAT activity. We detected no changes in the expression of these genes in the heads, confirming that the observed JAK-STAT activation in glial cells is attributable to cytokines derived from EECs (Fig. S4a,b). To test the ability of gut-derived Upd3 to drive events in the brain in another way, we made use of cells’ homeostatic response to changes in signaling input. Receptor expression is often upregulated in response to low levels of a ligand as a compensatory mechanism to enhance cellular sensitivity45. We observed an upregulation of dome transcript levels in the heads of animals with EEC-specific knockdown of upd3, exposed to oxidative stress induced by 15 hours of feeding with food laced with 1% H2O2 (Fig. 4e). Increased dome expression suggests reduced Unpaired ligand availability as a result of the loss of EEC-derived Upd3. Together, our results demonstrate that EEC-derived Unpaired cytokine signaling is required for activating glial JAK-STAT under oxidative stress.
Glia JAK-STAT modulates sleep in response to oxidative stress
Since EEC-derived Unpaired signaling promotes oxidative stress-induced sleep and glial JAK/STAT activity, we investigated whether the observed glial JAK-STAT signaling is involved in the modulation of sleep in response to intestinal oxidative stress. Knockdown of dome in all glial cells using the repo> driver completely abolished the ROS-induced daytime sleep response when animals were fed 1% H2O2 supplemented diet. The specificity of this effect was confirmed using three distinct RNAi lines, and with transgenic RNAi controls (Fig. 5a and S5a-c). Similar to the effects observed with upd2,3 mutants (Fig. 3g-i), glia-specific dome knockdown (p < 0.00001 for dome-iKK and p = 0.0556 for dome-iTRiP) resulted in progressive and substantial sleep loss over two consecutive days on 1% H2O2-containing food. To rule out developmental effects, we restricted knockdown of dome in glial cells to the adult stage using the repo> driver in combination with Tub-GAL80ts (repoTS>) and observed similar effects (Fig. 5b).
We then examined the dynamics of glial sleep-regulatory JAK-STAT signaling by inducing oxidative stress for one day and then transferring the animals to normal food to observe the recovery response. The results showed that, in response to 1% H2O2-containing food, animals lacking glial dome expression displayed a sleep response opposite from that of controls, with a reduction in sleep duration rather than an increase, confirmed using independent RNAi lines (Fig. 5c). This phenotype is similar to that seen in the upd2,3Δ double mutants (Fig. 3h-j). During the recovery phase, after the animals had been switched back to normal food, the sleep level of controls increased even further, but the sleep duration exhibited by animals with glia-specific dome knockdown immediately reverted to pre-stress levels. This pattern indicates that animals with inhibited glial JAK-STAT signaling display an aberrant dynamic sleep response to oxidative stress that is not a consequence of a physiological breakdown but rather arises from altered inhibitory sleep-regulating mechanisms. In line with this and similarly to the loss of upd2 or upd3 in the EECs, dome knockdown in glial cells did not decrease survival on H2O2-containing food (Fig. 5d). This supports the notion that physiological resistance to oxidative stress remains unaltered by gut-glial Unpaired signaling, which in turn indicates that the signaling modulation leads to a specific sleep phenotype. We further assessed whether loss of glial dome affected sleep responses induced by sleep deprivation by evaluating the animals’ ability to recover sleep after deprivation occurring during the second half of the night (ZT18-ZT24). Like controls, animals with glial-specific dome knockdown exhibited increased sleep (rebound sleep) in the morning hours (ZT0-ZT2) following sleep deprivation (Fig. S5d,e). This indicates that they exhibit normal rebound sleep responses to deprivation and retain the capability to further increase their sleep. Collectively, these data suggest that Dome-mediated JAK-STAT signaling in the glial cells specifically regulates ROS-induced sleep responses.
Furthermore, we investigated whether increased intestinal oxidative stress would exacerbate the phenotypes associated with the loss of upd3 in EECs or dome in glial cells by exposing the animals to food containing 4% H2O2 and observing sleep-architecture changes. Oxidative stress resulted in increased sleep in control animals as anticipated (Fig. 5e-h). However, in animals with EEC-specific upd3 knockdown, or glia-specific dome RNAi, exposure to 4% H2O2-containing food led to a pronounced loss of sleep during the daytime. For the EEC-specific upd3 knockdown, the RNAi effect was induced at the adult stage (Fig. 5e,f). We therefore also confirmed that adult-restricted knockdown of dome in glial cells resulted in similar phenotypes (Fig. 5i). Thus, under conditions of intensified intestinal stress induced by 4% H2O2 in the food, the loss of upd3 in EECs phenocopies the glial knockdown of dome, leading to reduced sleep and increased wakefulness.
BBB glial JAK-STAT pathway activation drives sleep in response to intestinal oxidative stress
To determine the subset of glial cells responsible for mediating Unpaired-driven sleep regulation, we focused on the perineurial and subperineurial glial cells that form the BBB. These BBB glial cells serve as the interface between the CNS and the periphery, including its organs44, and are ideally situated to receive circulating signals from the intestine. Using the 10xSTAT-GFP reporter, we assessed whether Upd3 from the gut activates JAK-STAT signaling within BBB glial cells. Knockdown of upd3 in the EECs using voilá> (without R57C10-GAL80) which drives specific knockdown in the gut without any neuronal effects (Fig. S4a,b), resulted in decreased GFP intensity in the outermost glial cell layer of the central brain facing the periphery after 15 hours of exposure to 1% H2O2-containing food, indicating reduced JAK-STAT activity in these cells (Fig. 6a,b). Interestingly, this knockdown did not affect JAK-STAT activity in the outer glial layer of the ventral nerve cord (VNC), suggesting that Upd3 acts specifically on brain BBB glia in response to intestinal oxidative stress.
We further examined BBB-specific JAK-STAT signaling effects on sleep by driving expression in subperineurial glial cells – those that form the permeability barrier – with moody-GAL4 (moody>). As observed with other manipulations, knockdown of dome in these BBB glial cells led to increased sleep during normal homeostatic conditions (Fig. 6e,f). Whereas controls exhibited the expected sleep increase both during 1%-H2O2 exposure and during the recovery period, loss of dome in the subperineurial BBB glia blocked these effects. When oxidative stress levels were elevated further using 4% H2O2-containing food, dome-RNAi in BBB glial cells led to sleep loss in response to oxidative stress, with sleep levels rebounding to pre-stress levels on the subsequent recovery day when animals were returned to a normal diet (Fig. 6e,f). These results suggest that disrupting dome specifically in BBB glial cells recapitulates the phenotypes observed with pan-glial knockdown or EEC-specific upd3 knockdown, indicating that Dome-mediated JAK-STAT activation in subperineurial BBB cells is required for maintaining an increased sleep state during intestinal oxidative stress.
To assess the sufficiency of subperineurial JAK-STAT signaling in inducing sleep, we activated the pathway in these cells by expressing a hyperactivated variant of the Drosophila JAK ortholog hopscotch (hopTum). Activation of JAK in BBB glia increased sleep under normal conditions without oxidative stress, consistent with a sleep-promoting effect of high JAK-STAT signaling (Fig. 6c-f). Moreover, animals with overactivate JAK signaling in BBB glia exhibited further enhanced sleep both during oxidative stress and in the subsequent recovery phase, as opposed to those with dome knockdown. This suggests that the combined activation of JAK-STAT induced by intestinal ROS and expression of hopTum leads to additive increases in sleep. Collectively, our data indicate that JAK-STAT signaling specifically in the subperineurial glial of the BBB links sleep responses to intestinal oxidative stress.
AstA signaling promotes wakefulness and mediates ROS-induced sleep regulation in BBB glia
Our results indicate that the effect of gut-to-glial Unpaired cytokine signaling is both dose-dependent and context-dependent. During intestinal oxidative stress, ROS-induced EEC Unpaired signaling leads to high JAK-STAT activity in subperineurial glial cells. Given that animals lacking this gut cytokine-to-glial signaling fail to maintain a high sleep state during oxidative stress, instead exhibiting increased wakefulness, this pathway appears to suppress wake-promoting signals under such conditions. The role of such wake-suppressive effects is likely to enhance sleep, aiding the process of recovery from intestinal damage. To identify potential wake-promoting signals that might be gated by JAK-STAT signaling, we examined a published dataset of genes whose expression in glia is positively or negatively correlated with these cells’ JAK-STAT activity following enteric infection33. The receptors for Allatostatin A (AstA), AstA-R1 and AstA-R2, both ranked among the top 4% of genes most strongly downregulated by JAK/STAT signaling (with AstA-R1 expression reduced by ∼80% and AstA-R2 by ∼90%). Notably, these were the only peptide-hormone G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) downregulated in the JAK-STAT-activate glial cells. This suggests that upon intestinal infection, the JAK-STAT pathway is activated in glial cells, which suppresses AstA signaling by reducing the expression of the AstA receptors. Considering the central role of neuronal AstA in sleep-regulatory circuits46,47, we investigated whether AstA might constitute a wake-promoting signal that is inhibited in glial cells by gut-derived Unpaired signaling. To evaluate the expression pattern of AstA-R1 and AstA-R2 within glial populations, we employed AstA-R1-GAL4 and AstA-R2-GAL4 knock-in constructs to drive the expression of nuclear-localized RFP. We co-stained the brain with antibodies against the glial transcription factor Repo, which marks the nuclei of glial cells. We observed that the outer layer of glial cells at the barrier between the brain and the periphery – constituting the BBB – express both AstA-R1 and AstA-R2 (Fig. 7a). These findings are in line with previously reported data showing expression of AstA-R1 and AstA-R2 in glial cells referred to above33. To functionally characterize the role of AstA signaling in these cells, we knocked down AstA-R2 in BBB glial using moody>. This led to a significant reduction in AstA-R2 transcript levels in dissected brains, indicating that BBB glia is a significant source of AstA-R2 expression (Fig. S6a). In support of an inhibitory role of Unpaired signaling, we observed that AstA-R1 and AstA-R2 expression was upregulated in the heads of animals with EEC-specific upd3 knockdown, following gut-oxidative stress induced by feeding with 1% H2O2-laced food for 20 hours (Fig. 7b). To demonstrate that this is caused by a failure to suppress AstA receptors in glial cells, we examined AstA receptor expression in brains following glia-specific dome knockdown in animals fed 1% H2O2-containing food for 20 hours. Indeed, glial-specific dome knockdown led to strong upregulation of both AstA-R1 and AstA-R2, indicating that ROS-induced glia-mediated Unpaired signaling is inhibiting AstA receptor expression (Fig. 7c).
Next, we investigated whether AstA receptors are involved in mediating the glial-regulated sleep response to intestinal oxidative stress. Like the Unpaired cytokines, AstA is released from EECs in response to oxidative stress48. It may therefore act as a context-dependent wake-promoting signal, that under certain conditions, is inhibited by Unpaired signaling in BBB glial to promote sleep. We thus hypothesized that during intestinal disturbances characterized by oxidative stress, gut-derived Unpaired signaling via JAK-STAT activation either sustains or consolidates sleep through a mechanism that involves the downregulation of wake-promoting AstA receptor signaling in BBB glial cells. In this model, EEC-derived Unpaired signaling normally suppresses AstA signaling in BBB glial cells under oxidative stress. Consequently, knocking down dome in these cells or unpaired in the EECs leads to a failure to downregulate AstA receptors, causing the animals to wake up under these conditions. Thus, inhibition of glial AstA receptors would impair the animals’ ability to respond to these wake-promoting signals altogether, leaving them unresponsive to intestinal ROS in terms of sleep. Consistent with this notion, we found that knocking down AstA-R1 or AstA-R2 in BBB glia attenuated the ROS-induced sleep response (Fig. S6b,c). Knockdown of AstA-R2 with second, independent RNAi line resulted in a more pronounced phenotype, with an almost completely blunted sleep response to intestinal ROS, showing no significant sleep increase during oxidative stress or the following day of recovery (Fig. 7d,e). AstA-R2 was also the most highly upregulated in response to loss of upd3 in the EEC or dome in glia (Fig. 7b,c), and it was the more strongly downregulated of the two AstA receptors in response to glial JAK-STAT activation, together suggesting that AstA-R2 is a primary receptor mediating these effects. Furthermore, knockdown of AstA receptors in BBB glia increased daytime sleep under normal homeostatic conditions, consistent with a wake-promoting role of AstA signaling in BBB glial (Fig. 7d,e and S6b,c).
AstA is produced by two cell types, neurons and the EECs in the gut46. Since BBB glial cells are well-positioned to receive hormonal signals from the periphery, they likely are regulated by gut-derived AstA. We thus examined whether gut-derived AstA acts as a wake-promoting signal, by conducting AstA knockdown in AstA-positive EECs using an AstA:2A::GAL4 knock-in in combination with R57C10-GAL80 to suppress GAL4 activity in the AstA-positive neuronal population. We confirmed that this driver efficiently reduces the expression of AstA in midguts without affecting neuronal AstA transcripts levels (Fig. 7f). Knockdown of AstA in AstA-positive EECs with either of two independent RNAi constructs led to increased sleep without any contribution of the transgenic insertion backgrounds (Fig. 7g,h and S6d,e), indicating that gut-derived AstA is indeed a wake-promoting factor. To assess whether EEC-derived AstA is sufficient to promote arousal, we employed the thermosensitive cation channel Transient Receptor Potential A1 (TrpA1)49 to induce hormonal release from AstA-positive EECs. Activation of these EECs suppressed sleep, an effect that was abolished by simultaneous AstA knockdown, supporting that the wake-promoting role of EEC-derived AstA (Fig. 7i,j). Taken together, our findings suggest that enteric oxidative stress induces the release of Unpaired cytokines, which activate the JAK-STAT pathway in subperineurial glia of the BBB. This activation leads to the glial downregulation of receptors for AstA, which is a wake-promoting factor also released by EECs. Gut-derived Upd signaling thereby gates the effect of AstA at the BBB and permits increased sleep during periods of intestinal stress. This process may aid in recovery and maintain overall organismal homeostasis.
Discussion
Intestinal inflammation and microbial imbalance are strongly associated with sleep disturbances and mental disorders such as anxiety and depression8,12–14. The influence of gut health on CNS-dependent behaviors is thought to be mediated by the gut-brain axis, comprised of diverse signals secreted by the gut that act on the brain to induce behavioral responses50. Whereas the regulation of feeding behavior by this axis has been extensively studied, leading to revolutionary approaches to medical weight loss and diabetes control, the role of gut-brain signaling in regulating sleep – a behavior affected by nearly all illnesses51,52– remains poorly defined. Sickness induces a state of sleepiness, which is believed to be a conserved adaptive response that promotes recovery by supporting energy conservation and efficient immune activity5,6. However, the exact mechanisms driving sickness-induced sleep remain largely elusive. We have demonstrated here that intestinal illness, through the release of interleukin 6-like Unpaired cytokines from endocrine cells of the Drosophila gut, regulates sleep via a glia-mediated pathway. This gut-to-glia communication promotes sleep during intestinal illness, presumably to facilitate the restorative sleep essential for both physical and mental health. Our findings provide mechanistic insight into how perturbations of gut health can influence sleep, potentially contributing to understanding the link between gastrointestinal disorders, sleep disturbances, and mental illnesses.
Cytokines, key mediators of immune and inflammatory responses, are thought to modulate sleep/wake cycles under disease conditions53. Interleukins and TNFα, cytokines induced during illness in mammals, have been suggested to promote sleep to aid recovery from disease. However, most of these effects have been attributed to the actions of cytokines produced within the CNS, leaving open the question of how diseases affecting other parts of the body can drive sleep responses. In Drosophila, sleep induced by immune responses is known to be influenced by the NFκB ortholog Relish in fat tissue54, and the neuronally expressed gene nemuri drives sleep and connects immune function with sleep regulation6. However, inter-organ signaling mechanisms by which intestinal disease or stress regulate sleep have not yet been described in either flies or mammals. Intestinal infections or inflammation lead to elevated levels of ROS in the gut, and our findings demonstrate that enteric oxidative stress in the gut triggers the production of Upd2 and Upd3 cytokines by hormone-secreting EECs. These gut-derived cytokines signal the state of the intestine to brain glial cells, including those of the BBB, and modulate sleep. This glia-mediated gut-to-brain signaling promotes wakefulness in healthy animals under normal conditions, while inducing sleep in response to oxidative stress in the intestine. This indicates a dual functionality, with low levels of gut Unpaired signaling promoting wakefulness, while higher disease-induced levels act oppositely to enhance sleep (Fig. 7k). A similar dose-dependent effect has previously been observed for interleukins in rats, in which injection of IL-1 into the CNS stimulates or inhibits sleep depending on the dose55.
Our results indicate that Unpaired signaling in subperineurial glial cells – those forming the BBB – activates the JAK-STAT pathway, and they suggest that this effect inhibits wake-promoting AstA signaling by downregulating AstA receptor expression. AstA and its receptors, which are orthologous with the mammalian Galanin signaling system, have been linked to the regulation of sleep, feeding, and metabolism46,56,57. Mammalian glia also express receptors for Galanin58, which also regulates sleep59,60, further underscoring a conserved role in sleep modulation across species. AstA-producing neurons induce sleep by releasing glutamate onto sleep-regulatory neuronal circuits, although recent findings also suggest a wake-promoting role for AstA signaling47. Irrespective of neuronal AstA, our experiments clearly show that AstA released from EECs of the gut acts as a wake-promoting signal and that activation of AstA receptor signaling in BBB glial cells induces wakefulness. This highlights the potential of peptide hormones to elicit different effects depending on their source tissue and thus their accessible target cells – whether they are produced by the gut outside the BBB or by the CNS inside the barrier. A similar phenomenon has been demonstrated for neuropeptide F39,61.
Drosophila exhibit conserved behaviors such as sleep, arousal/wakefulness, and anxiety-like responses4,62–67, and the EECs of the fly gut produce diverse hormones similar to those of mammals17–22, potentially influenced by diet, microbiota, and inflammatory responses. This makes Drosophila an excellent model for studying behaviors influenced by gut conditions through gut-brain signaling. Our findings suggest that the oxidative-stress level within gut tissues, which is modulated by intestinal bacteria and immune activity26,27, regulates sleep via EEC-derived Unpaired signaling, potentially explaining the observed links between gut microbiota and sleep disturbances in both flies and humans13,68. Furthermore, in mammals, conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease that are linked with oxidative stress69 are often associated with sleep and mental-health disturbances8,12,14. Our results imply that cytokines, including interleukin signaling from an inflamed or diseased gut, might be a mechanism by which intestinal illnesses affect sleep and mental health. Our findings raise the possibility that these cytokines may act on glial cells that integrate and relay these gut signals to brain sleep-regulatory circuits.
The neurons of the CNS are isolated from the circulatory system by the BBB70 that restricts the transmission of some hormonal and cytokine signals from the periphery to neurons within the brain. Our work suggests that the BBB receives AstA and Unpaired signaling from the periphery. Other reports indicate that Unpaired cytokines from tumors and from enterocytes also can activate JAK-STAT signaling in BBB glia cells in Drosophila33,71. One effect of glial JAK-STAT activity seems to be the alteration of BBB permeability71, raising the possibility that EEC-derived Unpaired signaling in BBB glia, directly or through AstA signaling, modulates sleep via regulation of BBB permeability, which has been linked to homeostatic sleep regulation36. Furthermore, the endocytotic activity of BBB glia, important for cellular transport and barrier function, has also been associated with sleep regulation37, and thus JAK-STAT-induced changes could regulate sleep through alterations in BBB trafficking. Another possibility is that JAK-STAT activity might regulate glial metabolic support for neuronal activity and in this way affect sleep patterns. In any case, our findings highlight the involvement of BBB glial cells in transmitting signals from the gut to the brain, adding another layer to our understanding of body-to-brain communication, which suggests that the BBB does more than protect the brain; it also responds to peripheral signals to modulate brain function, presenting an intriguing area for future research into gut-brain signaling.
Methods
Drosophila stocks and husbandry
Flies were cultured using a standard cornmeal-based formulation (82 g/L cornmeal, 60 g/L sucrose, 34 g/L yeast, 8 g/L agar, 4.8 mL/L propionic acid, and 1.6 g/L methyl-4-hydroxybenzoate) maintained at 25 °C with 60% relative humidity under a 12-hour light/dark cycle. Post-eclosion, flies were transitioned to an adult-specific, cornmeal-free diet (comprising 90 g/L sucrose, 80 g/L yeast, 10 g/L agar, 5 mL/L propionic acid, and 15 mL/L of a 10% methyl-4-hydroxybenzoate solution in ethanol)72 for 4-7 days prior to experiments. Adult mated females were used for all experiments. Flies were separated by sex one day prior to experimental procedures. Strains harboring the temperature-sensitive Tubulin-GAL80ts transgene were initially reared at 18 °C on cornmeal food and then switched to the adult diet for 3-4 days post-eclosion, still at 18 °C. Subsequently, they were incubated at 29 °C for five to seven days to activate RNAi expression in advance of the experiments. To ensure optimal conditions, the flies were provided with fresh food every three days. The following lines used in this study were sourced from the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (BDSC) at the University of Indiana: R57C10-GAL4 (#39171); UAS-upd3-RNAiTRiP (#32859); UAS-dome-RNAiTRiP (#53890); AstA::2A::GAL4 (#84593); AstA-R1::2A::GAL4 (#84709); AstA-R2::2A::GAL4 (#84594); UAS-AstA-RNAiTRiP (#25866); UAS-AstA-R2-RNAiTRiP (#67864); UAS-mCD8::GFP (#5137); Tub-GAL80ts (#7108); repo-GAL4 (#7415); moody-GAL4 (#90883); UAS-TrpA1 (#26263); and UAS-dsRed was extracted from (#8546). Additional fly lines were acquired from the Vienna Drosophila Resource Center (VDRC): control line w1118 (#60000, which is isogenic with the VDRC RNAi lines); UAS-upd2-RNAiSH (#330691); UAS-upd3-RNAiKK (#106869); UAS-upd3-RNAiGD (#27136); UAS-dome-RNAiKK (#106071); UAS-dome-RNAiGD (#36356); UAS-AstA-RNAiKK (#103215); UAS-AstA-R1-RNAiKK (#101395); UAS-AstA-R2-RNAiKK(#108648). The upd3Δ and upd2,3Δ deletion mutants were kindly provided by Bruno Lemaitre. UAS-upd3 and UAS-hopTum lines were gifts from David Bilder. The STAT-dGFP:2A::RFP line was generously supplied by Norbert Perrimon. The voilà-GAL4 strain was graciously provided by Alessandro Scopelliti. The R57C10-GAL80 transgene, situated on the X chromosome, was kindly donated by Ryusuke Niwa. The 10xSTAT::GFP line was a gift from Julien Colombani. To ensure uniformity in genetic background and to create control groups with an appropriate genetic background, all GAL4 and GAL80 lines used in this study were backcrossed to a w1118 line for multiple generations before being outcrossed with the genetic background specific to the RNAi, CRISPR, or overexpression lines to serve as controls in the experiments25.
Generation of tissue-specific CRISPR lines
To facilitate tissue-specific CRISPR-based disruption of the upd2 and upd3 loci, constructs were prepared containing two gRNA target sequences, flanked by efficiency-enhancing tRNA sequences. One construct was prepared for upd2, and two transgenes, targeting different genomic sites, were made for upd3. The upd2 construct was designed to delete the region encoding the secreted Upd2 protein. One upd3 construct should delete the initiator ATG codon, and the other – the one used in this work – deletes the second exon, which contains a significant portion of the coding sequence. Target-sequence cassettes were assembled by first cloning the tRNA insert from plasmid pCFD6 (Addgene #73915) between long oligos containing the gRNA target sequences using Q5 polymerase (New England Biolabs, #M0491S). The vector and the PCR products were then integrated using Gibson assembly (NEBuilder HiFi DNA Assembly Master Mix, New England Biolabs, #E2621S). Clones were sequenced to verify accuracy, and correct constructs were integrated into the fly genome at the attP2 site (chromosome 3L) by BestGene (Chino Hills, CA). The sequences used for cloning the upd2 and upd3 CRISPR constructs, with gRNA sequences indicated in bold, are shown in Supplementary Table 1.
Sleep, activity, and survival assays
The Drosophila Activity Monitoring System (TriKinetics, Waltham, MA) was employed to track sleep and activity patterns. Single flies aged six to eight days after eclosion were placed into glass tubes using light CO2 anesthesia. On one end, the tubes were sealed with a foam plug; on the other was placed a detachable 250-μL PCR tube containing 90 μL of feeding medium: either 5% sucrose in 1% agar/water, 5% sucrose mixed with various concentrations of H2O2 in 1% agar/water, or plain 1% agar/water for starvation conditions. All food media contained 0.5% propionic acid and 0.15% methyl-4-hydroxybenzoate to prevent microbial growth, with H2O2 being supplemented once the food had cooled to below 40 °C. Monitoring of the flies’ locomotor activity and sleep began at the beginning of the light cycle, after the animals had spent their first day in the tubes acclimating. Following an additional 24 hours on the standard 5%-sucrose diet, the PCR tubes were replaced with fresh ones containing H2O2 or starvation media at the lights-on transition when animals were awake, to avoid unnecessary disturbances to the animals. For recovery experiments, animals were switched back to a 5%-sucrose diet after 24 hours on H2O2-laced food. Periods of inactivity lasting 5 minutes or longer were recorded as “sleep.” In the sleep deprivation studies, the flies were placed in DAM monitors and subjected to mechanical stimulation, which was produced by attaching the monitors to a vortexer mounting plate (TriKinetics) and vibrating them for 2 seconds at the start of each minute throughout the 6-hour interval leading up to the lights-on time. Recovery sleep was assessed in flies that experienced a reduction of more than 60% in their typical sleep during the deprivation period, using their sleep patterns from the 24-hour period before the onset of sleep deprivation as a baseline. The occurrence of recovery sleep was specifically evaluated during the first two hours immediately following the sleep deprivation phase. For survival assays, flies were loaded into tubes filled with either plain 1% agar/water for starvation or 1% H2O2 in 1% agar/water to test oxidative stress resistance. The time of death was recorded upon the complete cessation of movement.
Feeding Assays
Short-term food consumption was quantified using a spectrophotometric dye-feeding assay73,74. All food intake experiments were conducted during the time of the normal morning meal, one hour after lights-on in a 12:12-hour dark/light cycle. Flies were transferred without anesthesia to food (90 g/L sucrose, 80 g/L yeast, 10 g/L agar, 5 mL/L propionic acid, and 15 mL/L of a 10% methyl-4-hydroxybenzoate solution in ethanol) supplemented with 0.5% erioglaucine dye (brilliant blue R, FD&C Blue No.1, Sigma-Aldrich, #861146) and allowed to feed for 1 hour. A control group of flies was provided with undyed food to establish the baseline absorbance levels of fly lysates. For each genotype, 1-2 flies per sample were homogenized in 100 μL phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) using a TissueLyser LT (Qiagen) with 5-mm stainless-steel beads. Homogenates were centrifuged at 16,000 g for 5 minutes, and 50 μL of the cleared supernatant was transferred to a 384-well plate. Absorbance was measured at 629 nm for erioglaucine using an Ensight multi-mode plate reader (PerkinElmer). Standard curves for dye were employed to correlate absorbance readings with the amounts of food consumed.
To assess feeding behavior, interactions with food were monitored over a 20-24 hour period using the Fly Liquid-Food Interaction Counter (FLIC) apparatus75. Drosophila Feeding Monitors (DFMs; Sable Systems) were placed in an incubator set to 25 °C (or 29 °C for strains carrying GAL80ts), maintaining 70% humidity under a 12:12-hour light/dark cycle. Each of the 12 DFM chambers was filled with a 10% sucrose solution, and individual flies were introduced in the afternoon following the morning meal. After several hours of acclimation, evening feeding activity was recorded. The following morning, at lights-on, the DFMs were refilled with fresh sugar solution, and data from the morning meal were collected. The feeding behavior was recorded using the manufacturer’s software and analyzed using R Studio with the provided package (https://github.com/PletcherLab/FLIC_R_Code).
Immunohistochemistry and confocal imaging
Adult midguts, brains, and VNCs were dissected in cold PBS and fixed for 1 hour at room temperature in 4% paraformaldehyde/PBS with gentle shaking. After a quick rinse with PBST (PBS with 0.1% Triton X-100, Merck #12298), the tissues were washed three times for 15 minutes each in PBST. The tissues were then blocked for 30 minutes at room temperature in PBST containing 5% normal goat serum (Sigma) and subsequently incubated overnight (or two days for CNS samples) at 4 °C with primary antibodies diluted in the blocking solution with gentle agitation. After removing the primary antibody solution, tissues were rinsed once and washed three times for 20 minutes each in PBST. Secondary antibodies diluted in PBST were applied, and tissues were incubated overnight at 4 °C, followed by three PBST washes and one PBS wash. The samples were then mounted on poly-L-lysine-coated slides (Sigma, #P8920) in Fluoroshield mounting medium with DAPI (Nordic Biosite, #GTX30920), and imaged on a Zeiss LSM-900 confocal microscope using a 20× air or 40× oil objective with Zen software. Image stitching was performed using the Stitching function of Zeiss Zen Blue 3.1, and analysis was conducted using the open-source FIJI/ImageJ software package76. All samples within each figure panel were dissected, stained, and imaged simultaneously using identical settings and reagents. To quantify STAT-dGFP:2A::RFP staining, dissected brains were fixed for 10 minutes in 4% paraformaldehyde at room temperature with agitation, rinsed once with PBST, mounted, and imaged immediately without antibody staining. For 10xSTAT::GFP quantification, brain and VNC samples were stained as described above, Z-stacks were projected in FIJI using the “sum” method, and Repo-positive cells at the surface were manually segmented to measure the raw integrated density with local background subtraction. For measuring 10xSTAT::GFP across the BBB, linear regions of interest were drawn through the glial layer perpendicular to the brain surface at the plane showing maximum brain size using FIJI’s line tool; GFP intensity was then quantified along these lines, and the peak was recorded for each transect. Antibodies used included 1:50 mouse anti-Repo (University of Iowa Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, #8D12), 1:20 mouse anti-Prospero (University of Iowa Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, #MR1A), 1:500 mouse anti-GFP (ThermoFisher, #A11120), 1:500 chicken anti-GFP (ThermoFisher, #A10262), 1:1000 rat anti-mCherry (used against Ds Red, ThermoFisher, #M11217), 1:500 Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated goat anti-mouse (ThermoFisher, #A11001), 1:500 Alexa Fluor 555-conjugated goat anti-mouse (ThermoFisher, #A21422), 1:500 Alexa Fluor 647-conjugated goat anti-mouse (ThermoFisher, #A-32728), 555-conjugated goat anti-rat (ThermoFisher, #A21434), and 488-conjugated goat anti-chicken (ThermoFisher, #A11039).
Triacylglyceride measurements
Triacylglyceride concentrations were determined following established methods72,77 using the Randox Triglycerides (GPO-PAP) method (Randox, #TR210). For each sample, flies were homogenized in 50 μl PBS per fly (between 2-4 flies per sample) containing 0.1% Tween-20 (Sigma #1379) using a TissueLyser LT (Qiagen) with 5-mm stainless-steel beads, 50 oscillations/second for 30 seconds. Homogenates were heated at 70 °C for 10 minutes to inactivate endogenous enzymes and centrifuged at 11,000 g for 1 min. Aliquots of cleared and vortexed supernatants (4 μl) were added to 36 μl of triglyceride reagent (Randox, #TR210) in a 384-well plate, covered with ultra-high optical clarity film (ThermalSeal RT2RRTM, Z722553, Excel Scientific). The plate was spun down 1,500 g 1 min and incubated for 10 minutes at room temperature. Absorbance for each sample was measured at 540 nm on an Ensight multimode plate reader (PerkinElmer). The readings were then converted to TAG concentrations using standard curves, prepared with triglycerides standard (Randox, 1352TR CAL Standard).
Measurement of transcript levels using qPCR
Several tissue samples containing 3 dissected guts, brains, or heads were collected for each condition or genotype. These samples were then homogenized in 2-ml Eppendorf tubes filled with lysis buffer containing 1% beta-mercaptoethanol, utilizing a TissueLyser LT bead mill (Qiagen) with 5-mm stainless steel beads (Qiagen #69989). RNA extraction was carried out with the NucleoSpin RNA kit (Macherey-Nagel, #740955) following the guidelines provided by the manufacturer. cDNA was synthesized using the High-Capacity cDNA Synthesis kit (Applied Biosystems, #4368814). Quantitative PCR was performed with RealQ Plus 2x Master Mix Green (Ampliqon, #A324402) using a QuantStudio 5 (Applied Biosystems) instrument. Gene expression results were normalized to the housekeeping gene Rp49 using the delta-delta-Ct method. The specific oligonucleotides used are given in Supplementary Table 2.
Statistics
Statistical analyses were performed using the Prism software package (GraphPad, version 10). Data were tested for normality before assessments of significance. For data following a normal distribution, pairwise analyses were conducted using two-tailed unpaired Student’s t-tests, and comparisons involving multiple samples used one-way ANOVA with subsequent post-hoc tests for multiple comparisons. Non-normally distributed data were analyzed using two-tailed unpaired Mann-Whitney U tests or one-way Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA, followed by tests for multiple comparisons. Additionally, interactions between genotype and diet were calculated using 2-way ANOVA. All plots represent the mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM).
Data Availability
Reasonable data requests will be fulfilled by the lead author.
Code Availability
The MatLAB scripts used for analyzing sleep are described10,78.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Lundbeck Foundation grant 2019-772 and Novo Nordisk Foundation grant NNF19OC0054632 to KR. The Zeiss LSM 900 confocal microscope and the PerkinElmer EnSight plate reader were purchased with generous grants from the Carlsberg Foundation (no. CF19-0353 and CF17-0615, respectively) to KR.
Competing interests
Authors declare that no competing interests exist.
Supplementary Information
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