Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, 600 South 43rd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Neuroscience. 2011 Dec 29;199:193-204. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2011.09.066. Epub 2011 Oct 8.
Negative emotionality affects sleep-wake behavior in humans and rodents, and the Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat strain is known for its stress-sensitive phenotype. Analyzing rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) microarchitecture by separating REMS into single (siREMS; inter-REM episode interval>3 min) and sequential (seqREMS; interval≤3 min) episodes, we previously reported that cued fear conditioning (CFC) increased REMS fragmentation in WKY compared to Wistar rats by increasing the number of seqREMS episodes. Since social support affects fear responsiveness in humans, we hypothesized that social interaction with a naive partner would affect the sleep-wake response to CFC in WKY rats. Thus, male WKY rats were assigned to either the social support or the social isolation group. Animals were fear-conditioned to 10 tones (800 Hz, 90 dB, 5 s), each co-terminating with a mild foot shock (1.0 mA, 0.5 s), at 30-s intervals. All subjects underwent a tone-only test both 24 h (Day 1) and again two weeks (Day 14) later. Social partnering was achieved by providing the fear-conditioned rat with 30 min of interaction with its naive partner immediately after CFC and during the tone presentations on Day 1 and Day 14. The results indicate that while CFC increased freezing behavior in socially isolated WKY rats, it increased grooming behavior in socially partnered rats. Socially partnered rats had increased sleep efficiency during the light phase and spent less time in NREMS during the dark phase. The number of siREMS episodes increased during both the light and dark phases in partnered rats, and the number of seqREMS episodes increased in socially isolated rats. Our findings suggest that social partnering may protect WKY rats from the REMS fragmentation that is observed following CFC in isolation.
负性情绪会影响人类和啮齿动物的睡眠-觉醒行为,而 Wistar-Kyoto(WKY)大鼠品系以其应激敏感表型而闻名。通过将快速眼动睡眠(REMS)细分为单个(siREMS; REM 期内间隔>3 分钟)和连续(seqREMS;间隔≤3 分钟)期,我们之前的研究报告表明,与 Wistar 大鼠相比,条件性恐惧训练(CFC)增加了 WKY 大鼠的 REM 睡眠碎片化,增加了 seqREMS 期的数量。由于社会支持会影响人类的恐惧反应,我们假设与一个陌生的伴侣进行社交互动会影响 WKY 大鼠对 CFC 的睡眠-觉醒反应。因此,雄性 WKY 大鼠被分配到社交支持组或社交隔离组。动物在 30 秒的间隔内接受 10 个音调(800 Hz,90 dB,5 s)的恐惧条件反射训练,每个音调都伴随着轻微的足底电击(1.0 mA,0.5 s)。所有动物都在 24 小时(第 1 天)和两周后(第 14 天)进行了纯音测试。在 CFC 后和第 1 天和第 14 天的音调呈现期间,通过让恐惧条件反射的大鼠与它的陌生伙伴进行 30 分钟的互动,实现了社交伙伴关系。结果表明,虽然 CFC 增加了社交隔离的 WKY 大鼠的冻结行为,但它增加了社交伙伴大鼠的梳理行为。社交伙伴大鼠在光照期的睡眠效率增加,在暗期的 NREMS 时间减少。在光照和暗期,伴侣大鼠的 siREMS 期数量增加,而社交隔离大鼠的 seqREMS 期数量增加。我们的研究结果表明,社交伙伴关系可能会保护 WKY 大鼠免受单独进行 CFC 后观察到的 REM 睡眠碎片化的影响。