Abstract

The study was conducted on 48 free-moving male rats to find out the role of the medial preoptic α 2 receptors in the regulation of sleep and body temperature. Recording electrodes for assessment of sleep-wakefulness, and injector cannulae for injection of drugs in the medial preoptic area were chronically fixed on the skulls of the animals. The noradrenergic fibres projecting to the medial preoptic area were destroyed in 24 rats by administration of 6-hydroxydopamine at the ventral noradrenergic bundle. Though arousal was produced in normal rats by the injection of the α 2 adrenergic agonist, clonidine, at the medial preoptic area, it induced sedation in rats with noradrenergic fibre lesion. Clonidine did not alter the rectal temperature in normal rats but it induced hypothermia in lesioned rats. Injection of α 2 antagonist, yohimbine, at the medial preoptic area induced sleep in rats with intact noradrenergic fibres. However, the sleep inducing effect of this drug was very much attenuated in the lesioned animals. There was no significant change in body temperature, in both these groups of animals, after yohimbine administration. The study indicates the role of presynaptic α 2 adrenergic receptors in arousal response and indirectly supports the contention that the α 1 postsynaptic receptors at the medial preoptic area are involved in hypnogenesis. It also suggests that the thermal changes induced by adrenergic system are mediated through α 1 postsynaptic receptors. But the thermal changes do not contribute towards the induced alterations in sleep-wakefulness. It is proposed that there should be separate sets of noradrenergic terminals for regulation of sleep and body temperature.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call