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Adenosine and sleep debt in the basal forebrain

Shiromani PJ, Blanco-Centurion C, Xu M, Murillo-Rodriguez E, Gerashchenko D, Hof PR (2006) Adenosine and sleep debt in the basal forebrain. Neuroscience 2006 Abstracts 458.13. Society for Neuroscience, Atlanta, GA.

Summary: The waxing and waning of the sleep drive is hypothesized to be regulated by endogenous sleep factors acting on specific neurons in the brain. One such factor, adenosine (AD), accumulates during wake and begins to inhibit neural activity in wake-promoting brain regions. The current version of the AD hypothesis (Strecker et al., Sleep, 2006) postulates that the adenosine A1 receptor activation on cholinergic neurons in the basal forebrain (BF) is key to sleep debt. Here we directly test this by administering 192-IgG-saporin to lesion the BF cholinergic neurons and then measuring AD levels in the BF via microdialysis. 46 Sprague-Dawley rats were administered either saline (n=21) or 192-IgG-SAP (n=25) (under anesthesia) and two weeks later when it is known that the cholinergic neurons have died, experiments were started. Rats were maintained on 12:12 light-dark schedule and given food and water ad-libitum. In rats with 95% lesion of the BF cholinergic neurons (n=7) AD levels in the BF did not increase with 6 h of prolonged waking but consistent with established findings it increased in non-lesioned rats (n=6). The lesioned rats had intact sleep drive after 6 and 12 h of prolonged waking, including a robust increase in delta power, indicating that the AD accumulation in the BF is not necessary for sleep drive. Next we determined that in the absence of the BF cholinergic neurons the selective adenosine A1 receptor agonist, CHA, administered to the BF continued to be effective in inducing sleep in a concentration-dependent manner, indicating that the BF cholinergic neurons are not essential to sleep induction. Basal sleep-wake levels and the amplitude of the diurnal rhythm of sleep-wake were not different between lesioned and non-lesioned rats. Thus, the hypothesis that basal forebrain cholinergic neurons are central to the AD regulation of sleep debt is rejected since neither the activity of the BF cholinergic neurons nor the accumulation of AD in the BF during wake is necessary for accumulating sleep debt.

Related Products: 192-IgG-SAP (Cat. #IT-01)

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