Dias Inês, Kollarik Sedef, Siegel Michelle, Baumann Christian R, Moreira Carlos G, Noain Daniela
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich (USZ), Schlieren, Switzerland.
Department of Health Sciences and Technology (D-HEST), ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Sleep Res. 2025 Apr;34(2):e14316. doi: 10.1111/jsr.14316. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
Boosting slow-wave activity (SWA) by modulating slow waves through closed-loop auditory stimulation (CLAS) might provide a powerful non-pharmacological tool to investigate the link between sleep and neurodegeneration. Here, we established mouse CLAS (mCLAS)-mediated SWA enhancement and explored its effects on sleep deficits in neurodegeneration, by targeting the up-phase of slow waves in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease (AD, Tg2576) and Parkinson's disease (PD, M83). We found that tracking a 2 Hz component of slow waves leads to highest precision of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep detection in mice, and that its combination with a 30° up-phase target produces a significant 15-30% SWA increase from baseline in wild-type (WT) and transgenic (TG) mice versus a mock stimulation group. Conversely, combining 2 Hz with a 40° phase target yields a significant increase ranging 30-35% in WT and TG mice. Interestingly, these phase-target-triggered SWA increases are not genotype dependent but strain specific. Sleep alterations that may contribute to disease progression and burden were described in AD and PD lines. Notably, pathological sleep traits were rescued by mCLAS, which elicited a 14% decrease of pathologically heightened NREM sleep fragmentation in TG mice, accompanied by a steep decrease in microarousal events during both light and dark periods. Overall, our results indicate that model-tailored phase targeting is key to modulate SWA through mCLAS, prompting the acute alleviation of key neurodegeneration-associated sleep phenotypes and potentiating sleep regulation and consolidation. Further experiments assessing the long-term effect of mCLAS in neurodegeneration may majorly impact the establishment of sleep-based therapies.
通过闭环听觉刺激(CLAS)调节慢波来增强慢波活动(SWA),可能为研究睡眠与神经退行性变之间的联系提供一种强大的非药物工具。在此,我们建立了小鼠CLAS(mCLAS)介导的SWA增强,并通过靶向阿尔茨海默病(AD,Tg2576)和帕金森病(PD,M83)小鼠模型中的慢波上升期,探索其对神经退行性变中睡眠缺陷的影响。我们发现,追踪慢波的2赫兹成分可导致小鼠非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠检测的最高精度,并且将其与30°上升期目标相结合,与假刺激组相比,野生型(WT)和转基因(TG)小鼠的SWA从基线显著增加15 - 30%。相反,将2赫兹与40°相位目标相结合,WT和TG小鼠的SWA显著增加30 - 35%。有趣的是,这些相位目标触发的SWA增加不依赖于基因型,而是具有品系特异性。在AD和PD系中描述了可能导致疾病进展和负担的睡眠改变。值得注意的是,mCLAS挽救了病理睡眠特征,这使TG小鼠中病理性增加的NREM睡眠片段化减少了14%,同时在光照和黑暗时期微觉醒事件急剧减少。总体而言,我们的结果表明,模型定制的相位靶向是通过mCLAS调节SWA的关键,可促使急性缓解与神经退行性变相关的关键睡眠表型,并增强睡眠调节和巩固。评估mCLAS在神经退行性变中的长期影响的进一步实验可能会对基于睡眠的疗法的建立产生重大影响。