An Adenosine-Mediated Glial-Neuronal Circuit for Homeostatic Sleep.
Theresa E BjornessNicholas DaleGabriel MettlachAlex SonnebornBogachan SahinAllen A FienbergMasashi YanagisawaJames A BibbRobert W GreenePublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
The work presented here provides evidence for an adenosine-mediated regulation of sleep in response to waking (i.e., homeostatic sleep need), requiring activation of neuronal adenosine A1 receptors and controlled by glial adenosine kinase. Adenosine kinase acts as a highly sensitive and important metabolic sensor of the glial ATP/ADP and AMP ratio directly controlling intracellular adenosine concentration. Glial equilibrative adenosine transporters reflect the intracellular concentration to the extracellular milieu to activate neuronal adenosine receptors. Thus, adenosine mediates a glial-neuronal circuit linking glial metabolic state to neural-expressed sleep homeostasis. This indicates a metabolically related function(s) for this glial-neuronal circuit in the buildup and resolution of our need to sleep and suggests potential therapeutic targets more directly related to sleep function.