An active Unc13A is Reboundless in sleep homeostasis
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One of the major characteristics of sleep is homeostatic sleep rebound following sleep loss. While the molecular mechanisms of baseline sleep regulation have been intensively studied, a specific molecular understanding of sleep rebound remains elusive. Here, we show that a constitutively active form of the Munc13-family presynaptic release factor Unc13A, which lacks the inhibitory Ca 2+ /calmodulin interaction domain (Unc13A WRWR ), dominantly suppressed sleep rebound upon acute sleep deprivation, leading to a nearly complete elimination of recovery sleep (“reboundless”). In contrast, baseline sleep remained largely normal. Through a genetic modifier screen, we found that this dominant “reboundless” phenotype of Unc13A WRWR was rescued by a partial loss of αSnap, a cofactor of NSF required for disassembly and recycling of post-fusion cis -SNARE complex. Given that Unc13A promotes fusion-competent trans -SNARE complex formation, these findings suggest that sleep rebound may depend on a delicate balance between SNARE complex assembly and recycling. Additionally, we found that expression of a human disease-associated active Unc13A (Unc13A PL ) variant attenuated baseline and rebound sleep. Since both Unc13A WRWR and Unc13A PL were shown to promote presynaptic release probability (P r ), we speculate that Unc13A suppresses recovery sleep likely by increasing P r and subsequently enhancing synaptic transmission, probably through elevated trans -SNARE formation and efficient cis -SNARE recycling. Taken together, our data demonstrate a fundamental role of Unc13A and SNARE dynamics in sleep homeostasis.