Serotonin, Acting In A Specific Brain Region, Promotes Sleep In Fruit Flies
Main Category: Sleep / Sleep Disorders / InsomniaArticle Date: 06 Jun 2006 - 0:00 PDT
Researchers have found that the neurotransmitter serotonin, known to affect many behaviors, also appears to promote lasting, quality sleep in an animal model for understanding how sleep is regulated. While central to the lives of most animals, the proper regulation sleep remains a largely enigmatic process.
The findings are reported by Quan Yuan, William Joiner, and Amita Sehgal at the University of Pennsylvania, and appear in the June 6th issue of Current Biology.
The fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is now established as a useful model for sleep research. The simple nervous system of the fly enables researchers to ask basic questions about sleep regulation and function that have been difficult to address in the more complicated mammalian systems.
Using the fly model in their new study, the researchers showed that pharmacological treatment with serotonin increases the amount, as well as the quality, of sleep. Serotonin even improves sleep in certain mutant flies that normally sleep less or have fragmented sleep, suggesting that serotonin treatment can overcome some deficits caused by other sleep problems. The researchers also identified a serotonin receptor that affects sleep, and showed that it acts in a specific region of the fly brain known as the mushroom bodies. Interestingly, the mushroom bodies are required for learning and memory in flies. Given that consolidation of memory is one of the functions hypothesized for sleep, and that serotonin is known to be involved in learning and memory in other animals, it is possible that the effect of serotonin on sleep is related to its role in learning and memory.
Heidi Hardman
hhardman@cell.com
Cell Press
http://www.cellpress.com/
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14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/44618.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (29)
Obesity: Is Fast Food To Blame?
posted by Tina Daniels on 2 Jan 2007 at 3:21 amNo, Fast Food is not to blame for the Obesity issue in the United States. Fast Food is not addictive. It is the customer's choice to spend their money on fast food. Fast Food places are not holding a gun to your head telling you that you have to buy and eat their food or you will be killed, are they?
I Partly Agree
posted by Veronica Cartwood on 2 Jan 2007 at 10:16 amI partly agree with you Tina. However, the amount of available choice is also a factor. I live in a meduim-sized town in Italy. When I go out and want something to eat, my choices of places that serve good quality food are wide. The last three times I went to the USA I walked and walked and could only find fast food centres. The last time I was in the USA, I was there for 6 weeks and ended up just eating fast foods - doing otherwise was too much of an effort. In Italy, I never touch fast food.
So, I partly agree with you. Nobody is forcing people to eat fast foods in the USA. But the choices, when compared to other countries, are much more limited.
European Fast Food
posted by Giselle Embry on 5 Jan 2007 at 11:13 amI have to agree with that opinion. The choices in the U.S. are poor. I've always been able to find small helpings of quick, healthy and reasonably priced food in Europe. To eat out in the U.S. one usually has to buy a huge portion, spend a lot of money and sit down and wait to eat. As a single mother I don't have the time or the money to do that.
I Partially Agree
posted by Dewi on 24 Jan 2007 at 11:17 pmIn my opinion, who should be blamed for obesity is not easy to declare. This is because of human rights consideration.
On the one hand, fast food companies have the right to grow and produce their products and make a profit from this process. On the other hand, these companies also contribute to tax or national revenue where they generate their companies. I believe that one of the aims is probably to ease people in obtaining quickly served food in the middle of rush hours people have.
However, consumers also have the rights to be told what is in foods, especially fast food. By this, I mean, the companies have to declare what the food contains, including the portion of calorie, fat, sugar, etc. For example, food labelling in lots of instant foods in markets. As a result, people can make a choice about what they have to eat.
In conclusion, obesity cannot be related only to fast foods, because there are many possible reasons why people gain weight. May be they exercises or eat fatty foods besides fast foods. This is still about people's choices, whether they eat healthy food. I think it might be better if fast food companies take responsibility in letting their customers know about what their products contain. Therefore, it is individual choice to consume the products even they are not healthy.
Nope
posted by darrbie on 22 Feb 2007 at 11:50 amI do not think that fast food is to blame for obesity in the U.S because it is someone's personal choice on what they spend their money on. If they decide to spend it on greasy, NON ADDICTING food then so be it, but face the consequences!
Is There Really Choice?
posted by Jason Flemming on 22 Feb 2007 at 12:07 pmI often travel to the USA, I live in Italy. I must say that in America there is very little to choose from - junk, junk, junk and junk. If you go out for a quick bite in the USA you may spend a long time trying to find some decent, healthy food.
In Italy it is easy.
So I agree with the previous comment - it is people's responsibility. However, I feel sorry for Americans, because everything is so loaded against them. All I have to do in Italy is sit down in any cafe and I will get a well balanced meal with plenty of salad, good quality protein and excellent carbs. Now, walk out of an Italian cafe and look at people's bottoms, and compare them to those in the USA and you have a difference in size of about 60%.
Eating Fast Food
posted by blah blah bad sheep on 13 Mar 2007 at 5:12 amIt appears that obesity has been directly related to fast food, however it isn't neccesarily fast food alone that makes a person overweight. Being obese comes from a number of choices: such as where i want to eat, what i'm going to get, how much i'm going to eat. No one ever said that they went to McDonald's expecting to eat a gormet meal that was exceptionally healthy. If a person wants to eat at McDonalds, they do so with the full awareness that the food there is extremely high in calories. It's not like McDonalds hides the nutritional information about the food, and even if it's not in plain view you can ask for sheet containing that information, or at least use common sense and think that eating a supersized Big Mac isn't the healthiest choice in the world. You can also split with someone. You aren't forced to eat it alone.
I Dont Agree!!
posted by Teresa Bonner on 10 Apr 2007 at 6:31 pmI think fast food is partly to blame. Most food in the U.S. is fast food. I think if fast food wasn't an option to eat then people wouldn't have the pressure to eat it.
I Totaly Agree
posted by maggie on 23 Apr 2007 at 10:41 amI agree because it is the people's fault to buy so much food and consume it. It is so ridiculous that people are so addicted to food that they eat so much and blame it on the place that they got it from.
I Don't Beleive Fast Food Is Addictive..
posted by Anon on 29 Apr 2007 at 9:56 amFast food is not addictive! Neither are cigarettes! Um... wait a minute..
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