Waste clearance is crucial for brain health, preventing neurodegenerative disease
By
Amanda Morris, Northwestern University
January
20, 2021 -- A new Northwestern University study reaffirms the importance of
getting a good night’s sleep.
By
examining fruit flies’ brain activity and behavior, the researchers found that
deep sleep has an ancient, restorative power to clear waste from the brain.
This waste potentially includes toxic proteins that may lead to
neurodegenerative disease.
“Waste clearance could be important, in
general, for maintaining brain health or for preventing neurogenerative
disease,” said Dr. Ravi Allada, senior author of the study. “Waste
clearance may occur during wake and sleep but is substantially enhanced during
deep sleep.”
The study was published today (Jan. 20)
in the journal Science Advances.
Allada is the Edward C. Stuntz
Distinguished Professor in Neuroscience and chair of the Department of
Neurobiology in the Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. He
also is associate director of Northwestern’s Center for Sleep and Circadian
Biology and a member of the Chemistry of Life Processes Institute. Bart van Alphen, a postdoctoral fellow in
Allada’s laboratory, was the paper’s first author.
Although fruit flies seem very different
from humans, the neurons that govern flies’ sleep-wake cycles are strikingly
similar to our own. For this reason, fruit flies have become a well-studied
model organism for sleep, circadian rhythms and neurodegenerative diseases.
In the current study, Allada and his
team examined proboscis extension sleep, a deep-sleep stage in fruit flies,
which is similar to deep, slow-wave sleep in humans. The researchers discovered
that, during this stage, fruit flies repeatedly extend and retract their
proboscis (or snout).
“This pumping motion moves fluids
possibly to the fly version of the kidneys,” Allada said. “Our study shows that
this facilitates waste clearance and aids in injury recovery.”
When Allada’s team impaired flies’ deep
sleep, the flies were less able to clear an injected non-metabolizable dye from
their systems and were more susceptible to traumatic injuries.
Allada said this study brings us closer
to understanding the mystery of why all organisms need sleep. All animals —
especially those in the wild — are incredibly vulnerable when they sleep. But
research increasingly shows that the benefits of sleep — including crucial
waste removal — outweigh this increased vulnerability.
“Our finding that deep sleep serves a
role in waste clearance in the fruit fly indicates that waste clearance is an
evolutionary conserved core function of sleep,” the paper’s coauthors write.
“This suggests that waste clearance may have been a function of sleep in the
common ancestor of flies and humans.”
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