Abstract

Sheep have large brains with human-like anatomy, making them a useful species for studying brain function. Sleep homeostasis has not been studied in sheep. Here, we establish correlates of sleep homeostasis in sheep through a sleep deprivation experiment. We then use these correlates to elucidate the nature of sleep deficits in a naturally occurring ovine model of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL, Batten disease) caused by a mutation in CLN5 In humans, mutations in this gene lead to cortical atrophy and blindness, as well as sleep abnormalities. We recorded electroencephalograms (EEGs) from unaffected and early stage CLN5(-/-) (homozygous, affected) sheep over 3 consecutive days, the second day being the sleep deprivation day. In unaffected sheep, sleep deprivation led to increased EEG delta (0.5-4 Hz) power during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, increased time spent in the NREM sleep state, and increased NREM sleep bout length. CLN5(-/-) sheep showed comparable increases in time spent in NREM sleep and NREM sleep bout duration, verifying the presence of increased sleep pressure in both groups. Importantly, CLN5(-/-) sheep did not show the increase in NREM sleep delta power seen in unaffected sheep. This divergent delta power response is consistent with the known cortical degeneration in CLN5(-/-) sheep. We conclude that, whereas sleep homeostasis is present in CLN5(-/-) sheep, underlying CLN5(-/-) disease processes prevent its full expression, even at early stages. Such deficits may contribute to early abnormalities seen in sheep and patients and warrant further study. Sleep abnormalities pervade most neurological diseases, including the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs). Here, we show that, in an ovine model of a variant late-infantile NCL, there is abnormal expression of sleep homeostasis. Whereas some sleep pressure correlates respond to sleep deprivation, the strongest electroencephalogram (EEG) correlate of sleep pressure, non-REM delta power, failed to increase. This highlights the relevance of sleep deficits in this disease, in which the drive for sleep exists but the underlying disease prevents its full expression. Sleep abnormalities could contribute to early disease symptoms such as behavioral disorder and cognitive decline. Our study also shows sleep homeostatic EEG correlates in sheep, opening up new opportunities for studying sleep in a large social mammal with complex human-like brain neuroanatomy.

Highlights

  • The overall function of sleep is still debated, its value for healthy neurological and cognitive function is undeniable (McCoy and Strecker, 2011; Xie et al, 2013)

  • Unaffected and CLN5 ؊/؊ sheep exhibit diurnal activity patterns On the baseline day, both unaffected and CLN5 Ϫ/Ϫ sheep spent they would occupy the upper end of the z-scored distribution, whereas similar amounts of time in each vigilance state

  • To analyze the distribution of the amplitudes of slow-wave oscillations and their temporal relationship with respect to spindle band activity, slow-wave oscillations from non-rapid eye movement (NREM) epochs with waveforms filtered in the delta band (0.5– 4 Hz) were detected using a threshold detection algorithm

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Summary

Introduction

The overall function of sleep is still debated, its value for healthy neurological and cognitive function is undeniable (McCoy and Strecker, 2011; Xie et al, 2013). Received Nov. 30, 2015; revised May 30, 2016; accepted June 7, 2016. Founding the sheep flock and costs in New Zealand relating to the rearing and genotyping of the animals were funded by a series of grants from the Neurological Foundation of New Zealand and the Batten Disease Support and Research Association (D.N.P. and N.L.M.) by a grant from CHDI, Inc. We thank Dr Polly Taylor and Roger Mason for anesthesia and technical support, Dr Matt Jones and Dr Ulli Bartsch for slow-wave detection MATLAB scripts, and Dr Vlad Vyazovskiy and Szilvia K.

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