Popescu Alexander, Ottaway Caitlin, Ford Kaitlyn, Patterson Taylor Wintler, Ingiosi Ashley, Medina Elizabeth, Hicks Stephanie C, Singletary Kristan, Peixoto Lucia
Department of Translational Medicine and Physiology, Sleep and Performance Research Center. Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine. Washington State University, Spokane, WA, USA.
Department of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 21:2024.08.20.607983. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.20.607983.
Sleep is an essential, tightly regulated biological function. Sleep is also a homeostatic process, with the need to sleep increasing as a function of being awake. Acute sleep deprivation (SD) increases sleep need, and subsequent recovery sleep (RS) discharges it. SD is known to alter brain gene expression in rodents, but it remains unclear which changes are linked to sleep homeostasis, SD-related impairments, or non-sleep-specific effects. To investigate this question, we analyzed RNA-seq data from adult wild-type male mice subjected to 3 and 5-6 hours of SD and 2 and 6 hours of RS after SD. We hypothesized molecular changes associated with sleep homeostasis mirror sleep pressure dynamics as defined by brain electrical activity, peaking at 5-6 hours of SD, and are no longer differentially expressed after 2 hours of RS. We report 5-6 hours of SD produces the largest effect on gene expression, affecting approximately half of the cortical transcriptome, with most differentially expressed genes (DEGs) downregulated. The majority of DEGs normalize after 2 hours of RS and are involved in redox metabolism, chromatin regulation, and DNA damage/repair. Additionally, RS affects gene expression related to mitochondrial metabolism and Wnt-signaling, potentially contributing to its restorative effects. DEGs associated with cholesterol metabolism and stress response do not normalize within 6 hours and may be non-sleep-specific. Finally, DEGs involved in insulin signaling, MAPK signaling, and RNA-binding may mediate the impairing effects of SD. Overall, our results offer insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying sleep homeostasis and the broader effects of SD.
睡眠是一项必不可少的、受到严格调控的生物学功能。睡眠也是一个稳态过程,随着清醒时间的增加,睡眠需求也会增加。急性睡眠剥夺(SD)会增加睡眠需求,随后的恢复性睡眠(RS)则会消除这种需求。已知SD会改变啮齿动物大脑中的基因表达,但尚不清楚哪些变化与睡眠稳态、与SD相关的损伤或非睡眠特异性效应有关。为了研究这个问题,我们分析了成年野生型雄性小鼠在经历3小时和5 - 6小时的SD以及SD后的2小时和6小时RS后的RNA测序数据。我们假设与睡眠稳态相关的分子变化反映了由脑电活动定义的睡眠压力动态,在SD 5 - 6小时时达到峰值,并且在RS 2小时后不再有差异表达。我们报告称,5 - 6小时的SD对基因表达产生的影响最大,影响了大约一半的皮质转录组,大多数差异表达基因(DEG)下调。大多数DEG在RS 2小时后恢复正常,并且涉及氧化还原代谢、染色质调控和DNA损伤/修复。此外,RS影响与线粒体代谢和Wnt信号相关的基因表达,这可能有助于其恢复作用。与胆固醇代谢和应激反应相关的DEG在6小时内未恢复正常,可能是非睡眠特异性的。最后,参与胰岛素信号传导、MAPK信号传导和RNA结合的DEG可能介导SD的损害作用。总体而言,我们的结果为睡眠稳态的分子机制以及SD的更广泛影响提供了见解。