Yu Xiao, Nollet Mathieu, Franks Nicholas P, Wisden William
Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China.
Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK; UK Dementia Research Institute, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK.
Neuron. 2025 May 17. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2025.04.028.
The relationship between stress and sleep is multifaceted, with stress capable of both disrupting and promoting sleep depending on the nature, intensity, and duration of the stressor. While stress commonly leads to sleep fragmentation and arousal in both humans and animals, certain selective stressors, such as immune challenges and psychosocial stress, promote sleep in rodent models. Specific neural circuits, such as those involving the ventral tegmental area and lateral habenula, mediate this stress-induced sleep. Post-stress sleep may facilitate recovery, reduce anxiety, and enhance stress resilience, but the extent to which sleep versus wakefulness post-stress aids long-term adaptation is unclear. Both human and animal studies highlight a bidirectional relationship, where stress-induced changes in sleep architecture may have adaptive or maladaptive consequences. Here, we propose that post-stress sleep contributes to resilience and discuss potential mechanisms underlying this process. A deeper understanding of these pathways may provide new strategies for enhancing stress recovery and improving mental health outcomes.
压力与睡眠之间的关系是多方面的,压力根据应激源的性质、强度和持续时间,既能扰乱睡眠,也能促进睡眠。虽然压力通常会导致人类和动物的睡眠碎片化和觉醒,但某些特定的应激源,如免疫挑战和心理社会压力,在啮齿动物模型中会促进睡眠。特定的神经回路,如涉及腹侧被盖区和外侧缰核的神经回路,介导这种压力诱导的睡眠。应激后的睡眠可能有助于恢复、减轻焦虑并增强压力恢复力,但应激后睡眠与清醒状态对长期适应的帮助程度尚不清楚。人类和动物研究都强调了一种双向关系,即压力引起的睡眠结构变化可能产生适应性或适应不良的后果。在此,我们提出应激后的睡眠有助于恢复力,并讨论这一过程背后的潜在机制。对这些途径的更深入理解可能会为增强压力恢复和改善心理健康结果提供新策略。