Abstract

Cognitive dysfunction in depression has recently been given more attention and legitimacy as a core symptom of the disorder. However, animal investigations of depression-related cognitive deficits have generally focused on emotional or spatial memory processing. Additionally, the relationship between the cognitive and affective disturbances that are present in depression remains obscure. Interestingly, sleep disruption is one aspect of depression that can be related both to cognition and affect, and may serve as a link between the two. Previous studies have correlated sleep disruption with negative mood and impaired cognition. The present study investigated whether a long photoperiod-induced depressive phenotype showed cognitive deficits, as measured by novel object recognition, and displayed a cognitive vulnerability to an acute period of total sleep deprivation. Adult male Wistar rats were subjected to a long photoperiod (21L:3D) or a normal photoperiod (12L:12D) condition. Our results indicate that our long photoperiod exposed animals showed behaviors in the forced swim test consistent with a depressive phenotype, and showed significant deficits in novel object recognition. Three hours of total sleep deprivation, however, did not significantly change novel object recognition in either group, but the trends suggest that the long photoperiod and normal photoperiod groups had different cognitive responses to total sleep deprivation. Collectively, these results underline the extent of cognitive dysfunction present in depression, and suggest that altered sleep plays a role in generating both the affective and cognitive symptoms of depression.

Highlights

  • Depression is traditionally an “affective” disorder, but the emotional disturbances associated with depression do not completely encompass all of its disabling aspects [1,2,3]

  • The results show that long photoperiods (LPP) exposure did produce a depressive phenotype that suffered from novel object recognition (NOR) impairments, indicating some amount of cognitive dysfunction

  • The results of the present study indicate that, in Wistar rats, a LPP-induced depressive phenotype shows deficits in novel object recognition, and may have an altered cognitive response to total sleep deprivation

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Summary

Introduction

Depression is traditionally an “affective” disorder, but the emotional disturbances associated with depression do not completely encompass all of its disabling aspects [1,2,3]. Cognitive Dysfunction in a Long Photoperiod-Induced Depressive Phenotype the affective symptoms are in remission, and worsen with every depressive episode [2,4,5]. This implies two things: one, the cognitive and affective aspects of depression are independent of each other, and two, the neural underpinnings of depression might persist even if affective symptoms aren’t displayed. Poor sleep quality, and altered sleep architecture are well-known characteristics of depression [6,7,8,9,10] It is well-known that sleep loss and sleep restriction negatively affect cognition [11,12,13,14]. The relationship between sleep loss and depressionrelated cognitive deficits is, still relatively obscure

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