Abstract

Repeated stress is a risk factor for mental disorders and can also lead to sleep disturbances. Although the effects of stress on sleep architecture have been investigated in rodents, the length of the stress exposure period in most studies has been limited to about 10 days, and few studies have analyzed the effects of chronic stress over a longer period. Here we investigated how sleep is affected in a mouse model of depression induced by 3 weeks of daily water immersion and restraint stress (WIRS). Sleep was recorded after 1, 2, and 3 weeks of stress exposure. Some stress-induced changes in several sleep measures were maintained across the 3 weeks, whereas other changes were most prominent during the 1st week. The total amount of non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS) was increased and the total amount of time spent awake was decreased across all 3 weeks. On the other hand, the amount of REMS during the dark phase was significantly increased in the 1st week compared with that at baseline or the 2nd and 3rd weeks. Electroencephalogram (EEG) power in the delta range was decreased during NREMS, although the total amount of NREMS was increased. These findings indicate that repeated WIRS, which eventually leads to a depression-like phenotype, differentially affects sleep between the early and subsequent periods. The increase in the amount of REMS during the dark phase in the 1st week significantly correlated with changes in body weight. Our results show how sleep changes throughout a long period of chronic stress in a mouse model of depression.

Highlights

  • Sleep disturbances are major symptoms of various psychiatric disorders

  • In assessing depression-like behavior, the forced swim test (FST) was applied as a measure for despair-like phenotypes and the sucrose preference test (SPT) was applied as a measure for anhedonialike phenotypes

  • This study shows how 3 weeks of water immersion and restraint stress (WIRS), which is a robust protocol for inducing depression-like behaviors in mice, affects sleep architecture

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Summary

Introduction

Sleep disturbances are major symptoms of various psychiatric disorders. More than 90% of patients with depression experience sleep disturbances (for review see Reynolds and Kupfer, 1987). A decrease in slow-wave sleep is reported in patients with depression (Hubain et al, 2006; Lopes et al, 2007; for reviews see Armitage, 2007; Nutt et al, 2008; Steiger and Kimura, 2010; Palagini et al, 2013; Medina et al, 2014). To understand and overcome the sleep disturbances associated with psychiatric disorders such as depression, it is crucial to elucidate how changes in the sleep architecture emerge during the development of the disease

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