Abstract

BackgroundThe current standard of care for insomnia includes gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor A (GABAA) activators, which promote sleep as well as general central nervous system depression. Dual orexin receptor antagonists (DORAs) represent an alternative mechanism for insomnia treatment that induces somnolence by blocking the wake-promoting effects of orexin neuropeptides. The current study compares the role and interdependence of these two mechanisms on their ability to influence sleep architecture and quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) spectral profiles across preclinical species.ResultsActive-phase dosing of DORA-22 induced consistent effects on sleep architecture in mice, rats, dogs, and rhesus monkeys; attenuation of active wake was accompanied by increases in both non─rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Eszopiclone, a representative GABAA receptor modulator, promoted sleep in rats and rhesus monkeys that was marked by REM sleep suppression, but had inconsistent effects in mice and paradoxically promoted wakefulness in dogs. Active-phase treatment of rats with DORA-12 similarly promoted NREM and REM sleep to magnitudes nearly identical to those seen during normal resting-phase sleep following vehicle treatment, whereas eszopiclone suppressed REM even to levels below those seen during the active phase. The qEEG changes induced by DORA-12 in rats also resembled normal resting-phase patterns, whereas eszopiclone induced changes distinct from normal active- or inactive-phase spectra. Co-dosing experiments, as well as studies in transgenic rats lacking orexin neurons, indicated partial overlap in the mechanism of sleep promotion by orexin and GABA modulation with the exception of the REM suppression exclusive to GABAA receptor modulation. Following REM deprivation in mice, eszopiclone further suppressed REM sleep while DORA-22 facilitated recovery including increased REM sleep.ConclusionDORAs promote NREM and importantly REM sleep that is similar in proportion and magnitude to that seen during the normal resting phase across mammalian animal models. While limited overlap exists between therapeutic mechanisms, orexin signaling does not appear involved in the REM suppression exhibited by GABAA receptor modulators. The ability of DORAs to promote proportional NREM and REM sleep following sleep deprivation suggests that this mechanism may be effective in alleviating recovery from sleep disturbance.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2202-15-109) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The current standard of care for insomnia includes gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor A (GABAA) activators, which promote sleep as well as general central nervous system depression

  • Dual orexin receptor antagonist (DORA) and standard of care differentially affect sleep across mammalian species To qualitatively compare the sleep architecture induced by orexin receptor antagonism versus GABAA receptor modulation across species, PSG analyses were conducted in telemetry-implanted mice, rats, dogs, and rhesus monkeys receiving either DORA-22 or eszopiclone during their usual active period, and evaluated relative to vehicle treatment

  • Representative doses for each species were chosen based on prior dose response studies inducing salient, active-wake reduction approximating that seen in rats, the highest dose tested (DORA-22 in rhesus monkeys), or a quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) effect magnitude similar to that in other species

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Summary

Introduction

The current standard of care for insomnia includes gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor A (GABAA) activators, which promote sleep as well as general central nervous system depression. The current study compares the role and interdependence of these two mechanisms on their ability to influence sleep architecture and quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) spectral profiles across preclinical species. Emerging preclinical and clinical data have suggested that GABAA receptor modulators and ORAs may differentially impact sleep parameters, with regard to rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Studies in rats have demonstrated that the GABAA receptor modulators eszopiclone and zolpidem disproportionately promote non─rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep while suppressing REM sleep. Eszopiclone and zolpidem dose-dependently disrupted sleep-stage─specific electroencephalography (EEG) spectral profiles in rats, even at low doses that do not induce sleep. The impact of the observed alterations in sleep architecture with GABAA receptor modulators, on REM sleep, remains to be determined

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