平衡疾病和恢复期睡眠中的大脑代谢状态

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Sara B Noya, Arjun Sengupta, Zhifeng Yue, Aalim Weljie, Amita Sehgal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

病态睡眠和睡眠剥夺后的反弹具有相同的体液信号,包括细胞因子,特别是白细胞介素的升高。然而,它们代表着独特的生理状态,具有独特的大脑发射模式和特定回路的参与。在这里,我们对小鼠皮层和海马进行了非靶向代谢组学研究,以揭示疾病睡眠和反弹睡眠与正常日常睡眠相比所发生的变化。我们发现,这三种情况具有独特的生化特性,大脑皮层的差异大于海马体。疾病睡眠和反弹睡眠都会增加色氨酸。令人惊讶的是,这两种睡眠条件对蛋氨酸-高半胱氨酸循环的调节截然相反,在能量特征方面也存在差异,病态睡眠会影响糖酵解中间产物,而反弹睡眠则会增加核苷酸的三磷酸化形式。这些研究结果表明,睡眠剥夺后的反弹会刺激大脑中富含能量的环境,而病态睡眠时则没有这种环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Balancing brain metabolic states during sickness and recovery sleep.

Sickness sleep and rebound following sleep deprivation share humoral signals including the rise of cytokines, in particular interleukins. Nevertheless, they represent unique physiological states with unique brain firing patterns and involvement of specific circuitry. Here, we performed untargeted metabolomics of mouse cortex and hippocampus to uncover changes with sickness and rebound sleep as compared with normal daily sleep. We found that the three settings are biochemically unique with larger differences in the cortex than in the hippocampus. Both sickness and rebound sleep shared an increase in tryptophan. Surprisingly, these two sleep conditions showed opposite modulation of the methionine-homocysteine cycle and differences in terms of the energetic signature, with sickness impinging on glycolysis intermediates whilst rebound increased the triphosphorylated form of nucleotides. These findings indicate that rebound following sleep deprivation stimulates an energy rich setting in the brain that is devoid during sickness sleep.

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来源期刊
European Journal of Neuroscience
European Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
5.90%
发文量
305
审稿时长
3.5 months
期刊介绍: EJN is the journal of FENS and supports the international neuroscientific community by publishing original high quality research articles and reviews in all fields of neuroscience. In addition, to engage with issues that are of interest to the science community, we also publish Editorials, Meetings Reports and Neuro-Opinions on topics that are of current interest in the fields of neuroscience research and training in science. We have recently established a series of ‘Profiles of Women in Neuroscience’. Our goal is to provide a vehicle for publications that further the understanding of the structure and function of the nervous system in both health and disease and to provide a vehicle to engage the neuroscience community. As the official journal of FENS, profits from the journal are re-invested in the neuroscientific community through the activities of FENS.
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