PiN Faculty Member - Dragana Rogulja, PhD

Dragana Rogulja, PhD

Associate Professor in Neurobiology

Harvard Medical School
Armenise Building, room 331A
210 Longwood Avenue
Boston, MA 02115
Tel: 617-432-3156
Fax: 617-432-1639
Email: Dragana_Rogulja@hms.harvard.edu
Visit my lab page here.



A remarkable change occurs in our brains each night, making us lose the essence of who we are for hours at a time: we fall asleep. A process so familiar to us, sleep nevertheless remains among the most mysterious phenomena in biology. The goal of our work is to understand how the brain reversibly switches between waking and sleep states, and why we need to sleep in the first place.

To address these questions, we are using
Drosophila melanogaster as our model system, because sleep in the fly is remarkably similar to mammalian sleep. Flies have consolidated periods of activity and sleep; arousal threshold is elevated in sleeping flies; the brain’s electrical activity differs between sleeping and awake flies. As in people, both circadian and homeostatic mechanisms provide input into the regulation of fly sleep: flies are normally active during the day and quiescent at night, but if deprived of sleep will show a consequent increase in “rebound” sleep, regardless of the time of day.

We are currently pursuing three main lines of investigation:

1. Molecular characterization of novel sleep factors isolated through our large-scale, unbiased genetic screen, with the goal of understanding
how the brain falls asleep and wakes up. We are currently focusing on several canonical cell cycle genes that we showed function in post-mitotic neurons to promote sleep.

2. Functional dissection of discrete neuronal clusters we identified as novel sleep centers in the fly. Some of these clusters consist of only a few neurons, to which we have genetic access for electrical and molecular manipulation.

3. To get at the question of
why animals need to sleep, we are investigating the causes of decreased lifespan in flies that are deprived of sleep.



Last Update: 5/14/2021



Publications

For a complete listing of publications click here.

 


 



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