TDP-43 impairs sleep in Drosophila through Ataxin-2–dependent metabolic disturbance | Science Advances
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia are associated with substantial sleep disruption, which may accelerate cognitive decline and brain degeneration. Here, we define a role for trans-activation response element (TAR) DNA binding protein 43 (TDP-43), a protein associated with human neurodegenerative disease, in regulating sleep using
Drosophila
. Expression of TDP-43 severely disrupts sleep, and the sleep deficit is rescued by
Atx2
knockdown. Brain RNA sequencing revealed that
Atx2
RNA interference regulates transcripts enriched for small-molecule metabolic signaling in TDP-43 brains. Focusing on these
Atx2
-regulated genes, we identified suppressors of the TDP-43 sleep phenotype enriched for metabolism pathways. Knockdown of
Atx2
or treatment with rapamycin attenuated the sleep phenotype and mitigated the disruption of small-molecule glycogen metabolism caused by TDP-43. Our findings provide a connection between toxicity of TDP-43 and sleep disturbances and highlight key aspects of metabolism that interplay with TDP-43 toxicity upon
Atx2
rescue.