Abstract

Increased sleep time and intensity quantified as low-frequency brain electrical activity after sleep loss demonstrate that sleep need is homeostatically regulated, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain elusive. We here demonstrate that metabotropic glutamate receptors of subtype 5 (mGluR5) contribute to the molecular machinery governing sleep-wake homeostasis. Using positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and electroencephalography in humans, we find that increased mGluR5 availability after sleep loss tightly correlates with behavioral and electroencephalographic biomarkers of elevated sleep need. These changes are associated with altered cortical myo-inositol and glycine levels, suggesting sleep loss-induced modifications downstream of mGluR5 signaling. Knock-out mice without functional mGluR5 exhibit severe dysregulation of sleep-wake homeostasis, including lack of recovery sleep and impaired behavioral adjustment to a novel task after sleep deprivation. The data suggest that mGluR5 contribute to the brain's coping mechanisms with sleep deprivation and point to a novel target to improve disturbed wakefulness and sleep.

Highlights

  • ‘Why do we sleep?’ is one of the remaining unanswered questions in biomedical research

  • positron emission tomography (PET) imaging sessions lasted for 67 ± 0.6 min and were immediately followed by ~45 min magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) imaging, to investigate metabotropic glutamate receptors of subtype 5 (mGluR5)-associated metabolic changes

  • During PET and 1H-MRS imaging, wakefulness was verified by polysomnography or continuous button press on a hand-held response box

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Summary

Introduction

‘Why do we sleep?’ is one of the remaining unanswered questions in biomedical research. Dynamic changes in electroencephalographic (EEG) slow-wave (SWA) or delta activity (0.5–4.5 Hz), and the slow oscillation (

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