Resting easy with a sleep regulator
INSIGHT
TRANSCRIPTOMICS
Resting easy with a sleep
regulator
Potassium ion channels in a subset of neurons in the brain of zebrafish
may have a role in promoting sleep.
WILLIAM J GIARDINO AND LUIS DE LECEA
Related research article Yelin-Bekerman L,
Elbaz I, Diber A, Dahary D, Gibbs-Bar L, Alon
S, Lerer-Goldshtein T, Appelbaum L. 2015.
Hypocretin neuron-specific transcriptome profiling identifies the sleep modulator Kcnh4a.
eLife 4:e08638. doi: 10.7554/eLife.08638
Image Mutations in the Kcnh4a gene reduce
sleep in zebrafish.
W
Copyright Giardino and de Lecea.
This article is distributed under the
terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use and redistribution
provided that the original author and
source are credited.
e are able to sleep as a result of a
delicate balance between competing
signals from complex circuits of neurons. In the hypothalamus, neurons that produce
a neuropeptide called hypocretin (Hcrt; also
known as orexin) control the transition between
being
asleep
and
being
awake
(Adamantidis et al., 2007; de Lecea, 2015).
These neurons also coordinate waking up
(arousal) in response to various stimuli
and
de
Lecea,
2014;
(Giardino
Bonnavion et al., 2015). Thus, finding out how
the activity of Hcrt neurons is regulated will be
vital for understanding how these neurons maintain a healthy balance between the sleep and
the awake states, and how this equilibrium is
disturbed in individuals with sleep disorders.
Now, in eLife, Lior Appelbaum and colleagues –
including Laura Yelin-Bekerman as first author –
report a new role for a potassium ion channel in
the regulation of arousal (Yelin-Bekerman et al.,
2015).
Giardino and de Lecea. eLife 2015;4:e12093. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.12093
Yelin-Bekerman et al. – who are based at BarIlan University, Toldot Genetics, the Weizmann
Institute of Science and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology – studied zebrafish (Danio
rerio), which display decreased movement patterns during the night that are characteristic of
sleep. Moreover, they only have 16–20 Hcrt neurons, compared to more than 5000 cells in mammals. Using transgenic zebrafish that express
enhanced green fluorescent protein only in their
Hcrt neurons (hcrt-eGFP) (Faraco et al., 2006),
Yelin-Bekerman et al. used a technique called
fluorescence-assisted cell sorting to isolate the
hcrt-eGFP cells and extract messenger RNA
(Figure 1A). They then amplified the RNA material before carrying out whole-transcriptome
sequencing to measure gene expression. Applying their most conservative criteria, Yelin-Bekerman et al. generated a list of 20 gene transcripts
that are found at higher levels in Hcrt neurons
than in other brain cells. These genes included
fam46a and other markers of Hcrt neurons that
have previously been reported in higher vertebrates (Dalal et al., 2013). With a more relaxed
threshold, 212 transcripts met the criteria for
being enriched in Hcrt neurons.
Using in situ hybridization, Yelin-Bekerman
et al. then tested the degree to which the hcrteGFP and the 20 gene transcripts co-localize:
they were able to confirm that several of the
candidates are highly expressed within Hcrt neurons, and that others were actually expressed in
nearby non-Hcrt neurons instead. Further analysis revealed that many of the genes contained
conserved motifs for the binding of transcription
factors, such as pax4, which is predicted to regulate as many as 44 genes in Hcrt neurons.
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Insight
Transcriptomics Resting easy with a sleep regulator
Figure 1. The kcnh4a gene is enriched in Hcrt neurons and promotes sleep in zebrafish. (A) Fluorescent-assisted
cell sorting (FACS) of neurons from hcrt-eGFP zebrafish followed by all-mRNA sequencing (RNA-seq) identified
212 genes that are significantly enriched in Hcrt neurons, including the voltage-gated potassium channel kcnh4a.
(B) In situ hybridization for knch4a confirmed its expression in 100% of hcrt-eGFP neurons. (C) Genomic analyses
revealed that kcnh4a lies directly upstream of the hcrt gene, a phenomenon that is conserved from zebrafish to
humans. (D) CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing produced a mutant zebrafish with a 60% reduction in kcnh4a levels,
resulting in hyperactivity and disrupted patterns of nighttime sleep.
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.12093.001
Of the transcripts that were verified as being
enriched in Hcrt neurons, Yelin-Bekerman et al.
focused on one called kcnh4a, which was the
only one that was expressed in all hcrt-eGFP
neurons in both zebrafish larvae and adults
(Figure 1B). It encodes a potassium channel and
further genetic analyses revealed that kcnh4a is
located directly upstream of the hcrt gene in the
zebrafish genome. In fact, these two genes are
directly adjacent to each other throughout the
animal kingdom, including in mice and humans
(Figure 1C). The expression patterns and tight
genetic linkage of the two genes suggests that
well-preserved mechanisms govern their interactions at the protein level.
Pursuing this rationale, Yelin-Bekerman et al.
examined whether the Kcnh4a protein is important for behaviors that are regulated by Hcrt
neurons (Figure 1D). The authors used CRISPR/
Cas9 genome editing to produce mutant zebrafish that had reduced levels of kcnh4a expression. Compared to wild-type zebrafish, these
mutants showed significantly increased movement in both the light and dark periods of a
Giardino and de Lecea. eLife 2015;4:e12093. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.12093
24-hour cycle. In further analyses in which sleep
was defined as a period of inactivity that is longer than six seconds (Yokogawa et al., 2007),
Yelin-Bekerman et al. reported decreased overall sleep time and shorter average bouts of
sleep in kcnh4a mutants relative to control
zebrafish, specifically during the dark periods.
An obvious next step is to determine whether
Kcnh4a is also co-expressed with the Hcrt neuropeptide in mammals, and whether it plays a similar role in the sleep-wake transition. In vivo
imaging with genetically-encoded calcium or
voltage sensors in kcnh4a mutants will likely be
useful in understanding the role of this potassium channel in the intrinsic properties of Hcrt
neurons. Also, the unique properties of the
zebrafish model make it possible to image the
activity of single neurons and entire networks
during 24-hour periods, and to monitor changes
induced by sleep or wake-promoting drugs. In
fact, Kchn4a is an intriguing potential new drug
target, and may be highly relevant for therapeutic approaches to treat conditions like insomnia
and narcolepsy.
2 of 3
Insight
Transcriptomics Resting easy with a sleep regulator
William J Giardino is in the Department of Psychiatry
and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford,
United States
Luis de Lecea is in the Department of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford,
United States
Competing interests: The authors declare that no
competing interests exist.
Published 10 December 2015
References
Adamantidis AR, Zh (...truncated)