Chauhan Satyam, Ettinger Ulrich, Fassbender Kaja, Norbury Ray, Kumari Veena
Department of Psychology, College of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Brunel University of London, Uxbridge, UK.
Centre for Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience, College of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Brunel University of London, Uxbridge, UK.
J Psychopharmacol. 2025 Aug;39(8):759-768. doi: 10.1177/02698811251337397. Epub 2025 May 15.
Prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustically elicited startle response is a widely used cross-species measure of sensorimotor gating. It is known to be reduced in various psychiatric disorders. Given previous reports of (a) disrupted PPI in young adults following overnight sleep deprivation and (b) disrupted sleep-wake cycles and psychiatric disorders being more common in evening than morning chronotypes, it is possible that there are chronobiological influences on human PPI.
We investigated chronotype, time of day (ToD) and synchrony effects (i.e. optimal functioning at preferred ToD) in acoustic PPI in young healthy adults.
Thirty-six adults, selected from a larger pool ( = 213) to represent morning, intermediate or evening chronotypes, were assessed on PPI (prepulse-to-pulse intervals: 30, 60 and 120-ms) on two occasions, 1 week apart: once in the morning (8:00-10:00) and once during the late afternoon (16:00-18:00).
There were no chronotype or synchrony effects on PPI. In the late afternoon, compared to the morning session, (i) there was greater startle amplitude on pulse-alone trials in association with higher schizotypy and (ii) greater PPI on 120-ms (but not 30-ms or 60-ms) PPI trials, but this effect became non-significant after covarying for schizotypy.
Our findings showed no chronotype or synchrony effect on PPI, and offer further support for PPI to be a stable biomarker that is not significantly modulated by chronotype or ToD in healthy adults. ToD, however, may influence some startle parameters in association with schizotypy and should be considered in future studies of schizotypy and related populations.
听觉诱发惊跳反应的前脉冲抑制(PPI)是一种广泛应用于跨物种的感觉运动门控测量方法。已知在各种精神疾病中该指标会降低。鉴于此前有报告称:(a)年轻成年人在通宵睡眠剥夺后PPI受到破坏;(b)睡眠-觉醒周期紊乱以及精神疾病在夜型人中比晨型人更常见,因此有可能存在生物钟对人类PPI的影响。
我们研究了年轻健康成年人听觉PPI中的生物钟类型、一天中的时间(ToD)以及同步效应(即在偏好的ToD时功能最佳)。
从更大的样本库(n = 213)中选取36名成年人,分别代表晨型、中间型或夜型生物钟类型,在相隔1周的两个时间点评估PPI(前脉冲与脉冲间隔:30、60和120毫秒):一次在上午(8:00 - 10:00),一次在傍晚(16:00 - 18:00)。
生物钟类型或同步效应均未对PPI产生影响。在傍晚,与上午时段相比,(i)仅脉冲试验中的惊跳幅度更大,且与更高的精神分裂症样人格特质相关;(ii)在120毫秒(而非30毫秒或60毫秒)PPI试验中PPI更大,但在对精神分裂症样人格特质进行协变量调整后,这种效应变得不显著。
我们的研究结果表明生物钟类型或同步效应均未对PPI产生影响,并进一步支持PPI作为一种稳定的生物标志物,在健康成年人中不受生物钟类型或ToD的显著调节。然而,ToD可能会影响一些与精神分裂症样人格特质相关的惊跳参数,在未来对精神分裂症样人格特质及相关人群的研究中应予以考虑。