Nollet Mathieu, Wisden William, Franks Nicholas P
Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London, UK.
UK Dementia Research Institute at Imperial College London, London, UK.
Interface Focus. 2020 Jun 6;10(3):20190092. doi: 10.1098/rsfs.2019.0092. Epub 2020 Apr 17.
Sleep is highly conserved across evolution, suggesting vital biological functions that are yet to be fully understood. Animals and humans experiencing partial sleep restriction usually exhibit detrimental physiological responses, while total and prolonged sleep loss could lead to death. The perturbation of sleep homeostasis is usually accompanied by an increase in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity, leading to a rise in circulating levels of stress hormones (e.g. cortisol in humans, corticosterone in rodents). Such hormones follow a circadian release pattern under undisturbed conditions and participate in the regulation of sleep. The investigation of the consequences of sleep deprivation, from molecular changes to behavioural alterations, has been used to study the fundamental functions of sleep. However, the reciprocal relationship between sleep and the activity of the HPA axis is problematic when investigating sleep using traditional sleep-deprivation protocols that can induce stress . This is especially true in studies using rodents in which sleep deprivation is achieved by exogenous, and potentially stressful, sensory-motor stimulations that can undoubtedly confuse their conclusions. While more research is needed to explore the mechanisms underlying sleep loss and health, avoiding stress as a confounding factor in sleep-deprivation studies is therefore crucial. This review examines the evidence of the intricate links between sleep and stress in the context of experimental sleep deprivation, and proposes a more sophisticated research framework for sleep-deprivation procedures that could benefit from recent progress in biotechnological tools for precise neuromodulation, such as chemogenetics and optogenetics, as well as improved automated real-time sleep-scoring algorithms.
睡眠在进化过程中高度保守,这表明其具有尚未被完全理解的重要生物学功能。经历部分睡眠限制的动物和人类通常会表现出有害的生理反应,而完全且长期的睡眠剥夺可能导致死亡。睡眠稳态的扰动通常伴随着下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺(HPA)轴活动的增加,导致应激激素循环水平升高(例如人类的皮质醇、啮齿动物的皮质酮)。在未受干扰的情况下,此类激素遵循昼夜节律释放模式并参与睡眠调节。对睡眠剥夺后果的研究,从分子变化到行为改变,已被用于探究睡眠的基本功能。然而,在使用可能诱发应激的传统睡眠剥夺方案来研究睡眠时,睡眠与HPA轴活动之间的相互关系存在问题。在使用啮齿动物的研究中尤其如此,在这些研究中,睡眠剥夺是通过外源性的、可能具有应激性的感觉运动刺激来实现的,这无疑会混淆研究结论。虽然需要更多研究来探索睡眠剥夺与健康背后的机制,但因此避免应激作为睡眠剥夺研究中的混杂因素至关重要。本综述在实验性睡眠剥夺的背景下审视了睡眠与应激之间复杂联系的证据,并提出了一个更复杂的睡眠剥夺程序研究框架,该框架可受益于生物精确神经调节技术工具(如化学遗传学和光遗传学)的最新进展,以及改进的自动实时睡眠评分算法。