Grafe Laura A, O'Mara Lauren, Branch Anna, Dobkin Jane, Luz Sandra, Vigderman Abigail, Shingala Aakash, Kubin Leszek, Ross Richard, Bhatnagar Seema
Department of Psychology, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA, United States.
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2020 Feb 19;14:6. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2020.00006. eCollection 2020.
Exposure to severe stress has immediate and prolonged neuropsychiatric consequences and increases the risk of developing Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Importantly, PTSD develops in only a subset of individuals after exposure to a traumatic event, with the understanding of this selective vulnerability being very limited. Individuals who go on to develop PTSD after a traumatic experience typically demonstrate sleep disturbances including persistent insomnia and recurrent trauma-related nightmares. We previously established a repeated social defeat paradigm in which rats segregate into either passively or actively coping subpopulations, and we found that this distinction correlates with measures of vulnerability or resilience to stress. In this study, we examined differences between these two behavioral phenotypes in sleep changes resulting from repeated social defeat stress. Our data indicate that, compared to control and actively coping rats, passively coping rats have less slow-wave sleep (SWS) for at least 2 weeks after the end of a series of exposures to social defeat. Furthermore, resilient rats show less exaggerated motor activation at awakenings from rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and less fragmentation of REM sleep compared to control and passively coping rats. Together, these data associate a passive coping strategy in response to repeated social defeat stress with persisting sleep disturbances. Conversely, an active coping strategy may be associated with resilience to sleep disturbances. These findings may have both prognostic and therapeutic applications to stress-associated neuropsychiatric disorders, including PTSD.
暴露于严重应激会产生即时和长期的神经精神后果,并增加患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险。重要的是,只有一部分个体在经历创伤事件后会患上PTSD,而对这种选择性易感性的了解非常有限。经历创伤后患上PTSD的个体通常表现出睡眠障碍,包括持续失眠和反复出现的与创伤相关的噩梦。我们之前建立了一种重复社会挫败范式,在该范式中,大鼠会分为被动应对或主动应对亚群,并且我们发现这种差异与对压力的易感性或恢复力的测量相关。在本研究中,我们研究了这两种行为表型在重复社会挫败应激导致的睡眠变化方面的差异。我们的数据表明,与对照组和主动应对的大鼠相比,被动应对的大鼠在一系列社会挫败暴露结束后至少2周内慢波睡眠(SWS)较少。此外,与对照组和被动应对的大鼠相比,具有恢复力的大鼠在快速眼动(REM)睡眠觉醒时表现出较少的过度运动激活,且REM睡眠的碎片化程度较低。总之,这些数据将应对重复社会挫败应激的被动应对策略与持续的睡眠障碍联系起来。相反,主动应对策略可能与对睡眠障碍的恢复力相关。这些发现可能对应激相关的神经精神疾病,包括PTSD,具有预后和治疗应用价值。