Postprandial Sleep in Short-Sleeping Mexican Cavefish.

IF 1.9 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY
Kathryn Gallman, Aakriti Rastogi, Owen North, Morgan O'Gorman, Pierce Hutton, Evan Lloyd, Wesley C Warren, Johanna E Kowalko, Erik R Duboue, Nicolas Rohner, Alex C Keene
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Abstract

Interactions between sleep and feeding behaviors are critical for adaptive fitness. Diverse species suppress sleep when food is scarce to increase the time spent foraging. Postprandial sleep, an increase in sleep time following a feeding event, has been documented in vertebrate and invertebrate animals. While interactions between sleep and feeding appear to be highly conserved, the evolution of postprandial sleep in response to changes in food availability remains poorly understood. Multiple populations of the Mexican cavefish, Astyanax mexicanus, have independently evolved sleep loss and increased food consumption compared to surface-dwelling fish of the same species, providing the opportunity to investigate the evolution of interactions between sleep and feeding. Here, we investigate the effects of feeding on sleep in larval and adult surface fish, and in two parallelly evolved cave populations of A. mexicanus. Larval surface and cave populations of A. mexicanus increase sleep immediately following a meal, providing the first evidence of postprandial sleep in a fish model. The amount of sleep was not correlated to meal size and occurred independently of feeding time. In contrast to larvae, postprandial sleep was not detected in adult surface or cavefish, which can survive for months without food. Together, these findings reveal that postprandial sleep is present in multiple short-sleeping populations of cavefish, suggesting sleep-feeding interactions are retained despite the evolution of sleep loss. These findings raise the possibility that postprandial sleep is critical for energy conservation and survival in larvae that are highly sensitive to food deprivation.

短眠的墨西哥洞穴鱼的餐后睡眠
睡眠和觅食行为之间的相互作用对适应能力至关重要。当食物稀缺时,各种物种都会抑制睡眠,以增加觅食时间。餐后睡眠,即进食后睡眠时间的增加,在脊椎动物和无脊椎动物中都有记录。虽然睡眠与进食之间的相互作用似乎是高度保守的,但人们对餐后睡眠因食物供应变化而发生的进化仍然知之甚少。墨西哥洞穴鱼(Astyanax mexicanus)的多个种群与同一物种的表层栖息鱼类相比,独立地进化出了睡眠减少和食物消耗增加的现象,这为研究睡眠与摄食之间相互作用的进化提供了机会。在这里,我们研究了在幼体和成年体表鱼类中,以及在两个平行进化的墨西哥鳕洞穴种群中,摄食对睡眠的影响。A. mexicanus幼体和洞穴种群在进食后立即增加了睡眠,首次提供了鱼类模型中餐后睡眠的证据。睡眠量与进食量无关,且与进食时间无关。与幼鱼不同的是,可以在没有食物的情况下存活数月的成年水面鱼或洞穴鱼没有检测到餐后睡眠。这些发现共同揭示了餐后睡眠存在于洞穴鱼的多个短睡眠种群中,表明尽管在进化过程中出现了睡眠缺失,但睡眠与进食之间的相互作用仍然存在。这些发现提出了一种可能性,即餐后睡眠对于对食物匮乏高度敏感的幼体的能量保存和生存至关重要。
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来源期刊
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology
Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Biology
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Zoology – A publishes articles at the interface between Development, Physiology, Ecology and Evolution. Contributions that help to reveal how molecular, functional and ecological variation relate to one another are particularly welcome. The Journal publishes original research in the form of rapid communications or regular research articles, as well as perspectives and reviews on topics pertaining to the scope of the Journal. Acceptable articles are limited to studies on animals.
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