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Stress-Induced Sleep After Exposure to Ultraviolet Light Is Promoted by p53 in Caenorhabditis elegans.

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TLDR
A new model of stress-induced sleep in Caenorhabditis elegans using irradiation by ultraviolet C (UVC) light is established and shows that cep-1 is required somatically in neurons for its effect on SIS, indicating that CEP-1 acts downstream or in parallel to ALA activation to promote quiescence in response to ultraviolet light.
Abstract
Stress-induced sleep (SIS) in Caenorhabditis elegans is important for restoration of cellular homeostasis and is a useful model to study the function and regulation of sleep. SIS is triggered when epidermal growth factor (EGF) activates the ALA neuron, which then releases neuropeptides to promote sleep. To further understand this behavior, we established a new model of SIS using irradiation by ultraviolet C (UVC) light. While UVC irradiation requires ALA signaling and leads to a sleep state similar to that induced by heat and other stressors, it does not induce the proteostatic stress seen with heat exposure. Based on the known genotoxic effects of UVC irradiation, we tested two genes, atl-1 and cep-1, which encode proteins that act in the DNA damage response pathway. Loss-of-function mutants of atl-1 had no defect in UVC-induced SIS but a partial loss-of-function mutant of cep-1, gk138, had decreased movement quiescence following UVC irradiation. Germline ablation experiments and tissue-specific RNA interference experiments showed that cep-1 is required somatically in neurons for its effect on SIS. The cep-1(gk138) mutant suppressed body movement quiescence controlled by EGF, indicating that CEP-1 acts downstream or in parallel to ALA activation to promote quiescence in response to ultraviolet light.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidermal Growth Factor Signaling Promotes Sleep through a Combined Series and Parallel Neural Circuit

TL;DR: The results suggest that ALA-dependent drowsiness, rather than RIS-dependent sleep bouts, appears to be important for increasing survival after cellular stress, suggesting that different types of behavioral inhibition play different roles in restoring health.
Journal ArticleDOI

A salt-induced kinase is required for the metabolic regulation of sleep.

TL;DR: It is proposed that KIN-29/SIK acts in nuclei of sensory neuroendocrine cells to transduce low cellular energy charge into the mobilization of energy stores, which in turn promotes sleep.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic sleep deprivation: using sleep mutants to study sleep functions

TL;DR: The advantages and limits of geneticSD are discussed in key genetic sleep model animals: rodents, zebrafish, fruit flies and roundworms, and how the study of genetic SD alters the authors' view of sleep functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A microfluidic-induced C. elegans sleep state.

TL;DR: The authors show that adult C. elegans show quiescent sleep-like behavior when in a microfluidic chamber, and that this is regulated by temperature, mechanosensation and satiety, and establishes a model system for studying how animals process multiple sensory pathways to regulate behavioral states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Normal sleep bouts are not essential for C. elegans survival and FoxO is important for compensatory changes in sleep

TL;DR: It is confirmed that Notch and JNK-1 signaling are required to achieve normal sleep depth, and suggested that DAF-16 is required for increased sleep bouts when signaling decreases, and that failure to enter sleep bouts is not sufficient to cause death in C. elegans, unless paired with concurrent mechanical stress.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: To their surprise, it was found that double-stranded RNA was substantially more effective at producing interference than was either strand individually, arguing against stochiometric interference with endogenous mRNA and suggesting that there could be a catalytic or amplification component in the interference process.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe methods for the isolation, complementation and mapping of mutants of Caenorhabditis elegans, a small free-living nematode worm.
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A complementation analysis of the restriction and modification of DNA in Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: Intercistronic complementation was observed between three classes of restriction and modification mutants of E. coli B, indicating that at least three cistron (the ram cistrons) are involved in the genetic control of the [restriction and modification of DNA].
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Efficient gene transfer in C.elegans: extrachromosomal maintenance and integration of transforming sequences.

TL;DR: A dominant behavioral marker, rol‐6(su‐1006), and an efficient microinjection procedure which facilitate the recovery of Caenorhabditis elegans transformants are described and it is shown that low copy number extrachromosomal transformation can be achieved by adjusting the relative concentration of DNA molecules in the injection mixture.
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