ゼブラフィッシュ幼生に4段階の睡眠相を確認 (Fish take naps during the day, too)

ad

2026-05-06 マックス・プランク研究所

マックス・プランク行動生物学研究所の研究チームは、魚類にも哺乳類に似た複雑な睡眠構造が存在することを明らかにした。研究ではゼブラフィッシュなどを対象に脳活動や行動パターンを詳細解析し、魚類の睡眠が単一状態ではなく、異なる脳活動段階を伴う複数の睡眠状態から構成されることを確認した。特に、活動低下だけでなく、神経活動パターンが周期的に変化する現象が観察され、哺乳類のノンレム睡眠やレム睡眠に類似した特徴が示唆された。これにより、複雑な睡眠構造は脊椎動物進化の比較的初期段階で既に成立していた可能性が浮上した。研究チームは、魚類モデルを用いることで、睡眠の進化的起源や神経機構、睡眠障害研究への応用が進むと期待している。

ゼブラフィッシュ幼生に4段階の睡眠相を確認 (Fish take naps during the day, too)
A tracking microscope.© MPI for Biological Cybernetics/ Vikash Choudhary

<関連情報>

眼球運動の運動学的解析により、睡眠サブ状態の新たな概日リズム組織が明らかになった Eye movement kinematics reveal novel circadian organization of sleep substates

Vikash Choudhary,Charles R. Heller,Sophie Aimon,Lílian de Sardenberg Schmid,Jennifer M. Li & Drew N. Robson
Nature Communications  Published:05 May 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-72222-0

Abstract

In most non-mammalian model organisms, sleep is operationally defined as persistent locomotor quiescence (e.g., ≥1 min) associated with decreased arousal1,2,3. In contrast to the long-established subdivision of mammalian sleep by eye movements4,5,6,7,8,9, the existence of sleep-associated eye movements and, more broadly, discrete sleep substates in non-mammalian organisms remains actively debated10,11,12,13,14. Here we present the first systematic investigation of fish eye movements during naturally occurring sleep across the full circadian cycle, under light–dark cycles as well as constant light and constant darkness. Across Danio species (Danio rerio, Danio nigrofasciatus and Danio aesculapii), we identify four discrete, conserved sleep substates with circadian organization: three sleep states with distinct eye-movement kinematics (QEM-1, QEM-2 and QEM-3) and one sleep state with no eye movements (QNEM). QNEM predominates at night, QEM-2 increases toward morning, and unexpectedly, QEM-1 occurs almost exclusively during the day. QEM-1 fulfills multiple criteria for sleep in zebrafish, including elevated arousal thresholds, partial loss of postural control, homeostatic rebound after deprivation, noradrenergic suppression, and brain-wide neural dynamics that encode state progression. Altogether, these findings uncover a previously unrecognized sleep architecture in larval fish, in which multiple substates with distinct eye-movement kinematics are conserved across Danio species and gated by circadian time and ambient light.

医療・健康
ad
ad
Follow
ad
タイトルとURLをコピーしました