Abstract

Sleep loss causes profound cognitive impairments and increases the concentrations of adenosine and adenosine A1 receptors in specific regions of the brain. Time courses for performance impairment and recovery differ between acute and chronic sleep loss, but the physiological basis for these time courses is unknown. Adenosine has been implicated in pathways that generate sleepiness and cognitive impairments, but existing mathematical models of sleep and cognitive performance do not explicitly include adenosine. Here, we developed a novel receptor-ligand model of the adenosine system to test the hypothesis that changes in both adenosine and A1 receptor concentrations can capture changes in cognitive performance during acute sleep deprivation (one prolonged wake episode), chronic sleep restriction (multiple nights with insufficient sleep), and subsequent recovery. Parameter values were estimated using biochemical data and reaction time performance on the psychomotor vigilance test (PVT). The model closely fit group-average PVT data during acute sleep deprivation, chronic sleep restriction, and recovery. We tested the model’s ability to reproduce timing and duration of sleep in a separate experiment where individuals were permitted to sleep for up to 14 hours per day for 28 days. The model accurately reproduced these data, and also correctly predicted the possible emergence of a split sleep pattern (two distinct sleep episodes) under these experimental conditions. Our findings provide a physiologically plausible explanation for observed changes in cognitive performance and sleep during sleep loss and recovery, as well as a new approach for predicting sleep and cognitive performance under planned schedules.

Highlights

  • When sleep is restricted, cognitive performance declines, recovering again when adequate sleep is obtained

  • We developed a mathematical model of the adenosine system in the brain and showed that it can parsimoniously account for changes in cognitive performance during acute sleep deprivation, chronic sleep restriction, and recovery, and changes in sleep patterns during long-term recovery

  • The model predicts that total adenosine concentration rapidly saturates to a higher level (Fig 2B) and, on a slower timescale, total A1 receptor concentration progressively increases (Fig 2D), in response to the elevated adenosine concentration

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Summary

Introduction

Cognitive performance declines, recovering again when adequate sleep is obtained. Variants of the two-process model have been used to describe changes in cognitive performance with sleep loss [7,8,9,10,11,12] This whole family of models, fails to describe the long-timescale changes in cognitive performance that occur under chronic sleep restriction [3,5,13,14]. This is because the models lack any time constants longer than ~20 h, so the effects of any particular sleep regime (restriction or recovery) rapidly saturate

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