Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DY, United Kingdom.
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ES, United Kingdom.
Neurobiol Dis. 2021 Jul;155:105367. doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2021.105367. Epub 2021 Apr 10.
Sleep disruption is a common invisible symptom of neurological dysfunction in Huntington's disease (HD) that takes an insidious toll on well-being of patients. Here we used electroencephalography (EEG) to examine sleep in 6 year old OVT73 transgenic sheep (Ovis aries) that we used as a presymptomatic model of HD. We hypothesized that despite the lack of overt symptoms of HD at this age, early alterations of the sleep-wake pattern and EEG powers may already be present. We recorded EEG from female transgenic and normal sheep (5/group) during two undisturbed 'baseline' nights with different lighting conditions. We then recorded continuously through a night of sleep disruption and the following 24 h (recovery day and night). On baseline nights, regardless of whether the lights were on or off, transgenic sheep spent more time awake than normal sheep particularly at the beginning of the night. Furthermore, there were significant differences between transgenic and normal sheep in both EEG power and its pattern of distribution during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. In particular, there was a significant decrease in delta (0.5-4 Hz) power across the night in transgenic compared to normal sheep, and the distributions of delta, theta and alpha oscillations that typically dominate the EEG in the first half of the night of normal sheep were skewed so they were predominant in the second, rather than the first half of the night in transgenic sheep. Interestingly, the effect of sleep disruption on normal sheep was also to skew the pattern of distribution of EEG powers so they looked more like that of transgenic sheep under baseline conditions. Thus it is possible that transgenic sheep exist in a state that resemble a chronic state of physiological sleep deprivation. During the sleep recovery period, normal sheep showed a significant 'rebound' increase in delta power with frontal dominance. A similar rebound was not seen in transgenic sheep, suggesting that their homeostatic response to sleep deprivation is abnormal. Although sleep abnormalities in early stage HD patients are subtle, with patients often unaware of their existence, they may contribute to impairment of neurological function that herald the onset of disease. A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying EEG abnormalities in early stage HD would give insight into how, and when, they progress into the sleep disorder. The transgenic sheep model is ideally positioned for studies of the earliest phase of disease when sleep abnormalities first emerge.
睡眠障碍是亨廷顿病(HD)神经功能障碍的一种常见隐形症状,它悄然影响着患者的健康。在这里,我们使用脑电图(EEG)检查了 6 岁的 OVT73 转基因绵羊(Ovis aries)的睡眠情况,该绵羊是我们用于 HD 前症状模型的。我们假设,尽管在这个年龄没有明显的 HD 症状,但睡眠-觉醒模式和 EEG 功率的早期改变可能已经存在。我们记录了 5 只转基因绵羊和 5 只正常绵羊的 EEG(每组 5 只),在 2 个不受干扰的“基线”夜晚进行,这两个夜晚的光照条件不同。然后,我们在一夜的睡眠干扰和接下来的 24 小时(恢复白天和黑夜)中进行连续记录。在基线夜晚,无论灯是否打开,转基因绵羊比正常绵羊花费更多的时间处于清醒状态,特别是在夜晚的开始。此外,在非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠期间,转基因绵羊和正常绵羊之间的 EEG 功率及其分布存在显著差异。特别是,与正常绵羊相比,转基因绵羊在整个夜晚的 delta(0.5-4 Hz)功率显着降低,并且在正常绵羊的第一个夜晚中通常占主导地位的 delta、theta 和 alpha 振荡的分布被扭曲,使得它们在转基因绵羊的第二个夜晚而非第一个夜晚占主导地位。有趣的是,睡眠干扰对正常绵羊的影响也是使 EEG 功率的分布模式发生扭曲,使得它们在基线条件下看起来更像转基因绵羊。因此,转基因绵羊可能处于一种类似于慢性生理性睡眠剥夺的状态。在睡眠恢复期间,正常绵羊的 delta 功率出现明显的“反弹”增加,且以额部优势为主。在转基因绵羊中没有观察到类似的反弹,这表明它们对睡眠剥夺的稳态反应异常。尽管早期 HD 患者的睡眠异常很微妙,患者往往没有意识到它们的存在,但它们可能会导致神经功能障碍,从而预示着疾病的发作。对早期 HD 中 EEG 异常机制的更好理解将深入了解它们是如何以及何时进展为睡眠障碍的。转基因绵羊模型非常适合研究睡眠异常首次出现时疾病的最早阶段。