4.6 Article

Neurotransmitters of sleep and wakefulness in flatworms

Journal

SLEEP
Volume 45, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsac053

Keywords

dopamine; GABA; Girardia; histamine; nematode; platyhelminth; pyrilamine

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP170101003]
  2. Defence Science Institute

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This study investigated the effects of neurotransmitters on sleep and wakefulness in flatworms. The results showed that dopamine and histamine promote wakefulness, while pyrilamine and GABA promote restfulness. Acetylcholine, glutamate, serotonin, and adenosine had no apparent effect on flatworm behavior.
Study Objectives Sleep is a prominent behavioral and biochemical state observed in all animals studied, including platyhelminth flatworms. Investigations into the biochemical mechanisms associated with sleep-and wakefulness-are important for understanding how these states are regulated and how that regulation changed with the evolution of new types of animals. Unfortunately, beyond a handful of vertebrates, such studies on invertebrates are rare. Methods We investigated the effect of seven neurotransmitters, and one pharmacological compound, that modulate either sleep or wakefulness in mammals, on flatworms (Girardia tigrina). Flatworms were exposed via ingestion and diffusion to four neurotransmitters that promote wakefulness in vertebrates (acetylcholine, dopamine, glutamate, histamine), and three that induce sleep (adenosine, GABA, serotonin) along with the H1 histamine receptor antagonist pyrilamine. Compounds were administered over concentrations spanning three to five orders of magnitude. Flatworms were then transferred to fresh water and video recorded for analysis. Results Dopamine and histamine decreased the time spent inactive and increased distance traveled, consistent with their wake-promoting effect in vertebrates and fruit flies; pyrilamine increased restfulness and GABA showed a nonsignificant trend towards promoting restfulness in a dose-dependent manner, in agreement with their sleep-inducing effect in vertebrates, fruit flies, and Hydra. Similar to Hydra, acetylcholine, glutamate, and serotonin, but also adenosine, had no apparent effect on flatworm behavior. Conclusions These data demonstrate the potential of neurotransmitters to regulate sleep and wakefulness in flatworms and highlight the conserved action of some neurotransmitters across species.

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