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Publication | Open Access

A single phosphorylation site of SIK3 regulates daily sleep amounts and sleep need in mice

77

Citations

27

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Sleep is an evolutionally conserved behavior from vertebrates to invertebrates. The molecular mechanisms that determine daily sleep amounts and the neuronal substrates for homeostatic sleep need remain unknown. Through a large-scale forward genetic screen of sleep behaviors in mice, we previously demonstrated that the <i>Sleepy</i> mutant allele of the <i>Sik3</i> protein kinase gene markedly increases daily nonrapid-eye movement sleep (NREMS) amounts and sleep need. The <i>Sleepy</i> mutation deletes the in-frame exon 13 encoding a peptide stretch encompassing S551, a known PKA recognition site in SIK3. Here, we demonstrate that single amino acid changes at SIK3 S551 (<i>S551A</i> and <i>S551D</i>) reproduce the hypersomnia phenotype of the <i>Sleepy</i> mutant mice. These mice exhibit increased NREMS amounts and inherently increased sleep need, the latter demonstrated by increased duration of individual NREMS episodes and higher EEG slow-wave activity during NREMS. At the molecular level, deletion or mutation at SIK3 S551 reduces PKA recognition and abolishes 14-3-3 binding. Our results suggest that the evolutionally conserved S551 of SIK3 mediates, together with PKA and 14-3-3, the intracellular signaling crucial for the regulation of daily sleep amounts and sleep need at the organismal level.

References

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