Mashoodh Rahia, Stamp Jennifer A, Wilkinson Michael, Rusak Benjamin, Semba Kazue
Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H.
Physiol Behav. 2008 Nov 28;95(4):562-9. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.08.001. Epub 2008 Aug 12.
Women recover from sleep deprivation more efficiently than men, but the mechanism for this difference is unknown. Effects of estrogen on sleep suggest that it could play a role, but the brain targets on which estrogen may act to have this effect have not been identified. Sleep deprivation increases levels of the immediate-early gene protein c-Fos in selected brain regions, but it is unknown whether estrogen modulates this response. We investigated the influence of different levels of exogenous estradiol on the c-Fos response to sleep deprivation in ovariectomized female rats. Female rats were treated with low or high levels of estradiol (mimicking diestrous and proestrous levels, respectively) delivered via subcutaneous silastic tubes. Control ovariectomized females and sham-operated males were implanted with tubes filled with cholesterol. One week after surgery, half of the rats underwent a 3 h period of sleep deprivation during the light phase in a motorized Wahmann activity wheel that rotated constantly at a slow speed, while half were confined to fixed wheels. Immediately after sleep deprivation, animals were killed and their brains processed to detect c-Fos using immunohistochemistry. Sleep deprivation increased the number of c-Fos positive cells in a number of brain areas, including the caudate putamen, medial preoptic area, perifornical hypothalamus, and anterior paraventricular thalamic nucleus. Other areas, including the suprachiasmatic nucleus, posterior paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, posterior paraventricular thalamic nucleus, arcuate nucleus, and central amygdala, did not respond to 3 h sleep deprivation with a significant increase in c-Fos levels. Levels of c-Fos induced in the selected brain regions by sleep deprivation were not modulated by estrogen levels, nor by sex.
女性比男性能更有效地从睡眠剥夺中恢复过来,但其差异机制尚不清楚。雌激素对睡眠的影响表明它可能起作用,但雌激素发挥此作用的大脑靶点尚未确定。睡眠剥夺会使特定脑区的即刻早期基因蛋白c-Fos水平升高,但雌激素是否调节这种反应尚不清楚。我们研究了不同水平的外源性雌二醇对去卵巢雌性大鼠睡眠剥夺后c-Fos反应的影响。通过皮下硅橡胶管给雌性大鼠分别注射低水平或高水平的雌二醇(分别模拟动情后期和动情前期水平)。将去卵巢的对照雌性大鼠和假手术雄性大鼠植入填充有胆固醇的管子。手术后一周,一半大鼠在光照期于电动Wahmann活动轮中进行3小时的睡眠剥夺,活动轮以缓慢速度持续旋转,而另一半则被限制在固定轮中。睡眠剥夺后立即处死动物,取脑进行处理,采用免疫组织化学法检测c-Fos。睡眠剥夺增加了包括尾壳核、内侧视前区、穹窿周下丘脑和丘脑前室旁核在内的多个脑区中c-Fos阳性细胞的数量。其他脑区,包括视交叉上核、下丘脑室旁后核、丘脑室旁后核、弓状核和中央杏仁核,对3小时睡眠剥夺没有出现c-Fos水平显著升高的反应。睡眠剥夺在选定脑区诱导的c-Fos水平不受雌激素水平和性别的调节。