A Causal Role for Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor in the Homeostatic Regulation of Sleep
Open Access
- 9 April 2008
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 28 (15) , 4088-4095
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.5510-07.2008
Abstract
Slow-wave activity (SWA), the EEG power between 0.5 and 4 Hz during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, is one of the best characterized markers of sleep need, because it increases as a function of preceding waking duration and decreases during sleep, but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. We hypothesized that SWA is high at sleep onset because it reflects the occurrence, during the previous waking period, of widespread synaptic potentiation in cortical and subcortical areas. Consistent with this hypothesis, we recently showed that the more rats explore, the stronger is the cortical expression of BDNF during wakefulness, and the larger is the increase in SWA during the subsequent sleep period. There is compelling evidence that BDNF plays a causal role in synaptic potentiation, and exogenous application of BDNFin vivois sufficient to induce long-term increases in synaptic strength. We therefore performed cortical unilateral microinjections of BDNF in awake rats and measured SWA during the subsequent sleep period. SWA during NREM sleep was higher in the injected hemisphere relative to the contralateral one. The effect was reversible within 2 h, and did not occur during wakefulness or rapid eye movement sleep. Asymmetries in NREM SWA did not occur after vehicle injections. Furthermore, microinjections, during wakefulness, of a polyclonal anti-BDNF antibody or K252a, an inhibitor of BDNF TrkB receptors, led to a local SWA decrease during the following sleep period. These effects were also reversible and specific for NREM sleep. These results show a causal link between BDNF expression during wakefulness and subsequent sleep regulation.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sustained Arc/Arg3.1 Synthesis Controls Long-Term Potentiation Consolidation through Regulation of Local Actin Polymerization in the Dentate GyrusIn VivoJournal of Neuroscience, 2007
- Upregulation of Neurotrophic Factors Selectively in Frontal Cortex in Response to Olfactory Discrimination LearningNeural Plasticity, 2007
- TMS-Induced Cortical Potentiation during Wakefulness Locally Increases Slow Wave Activity during SleepPLOS ONE, 2007
- Arm immobilization causes cortical plastic changes and locally decreases sleep slow wave activityNature Neuroscience, 2006
- From waking to sleeping: neuronal and chemical substratesTrends in Pharmacological Sciences, 2005
- Local sleep and learningNature, 2004
- Sleep Deprivation Effects on Growth Factor Expression in Neonatal Rats: A Potential Role for BDNF in the Mediation of Delta PowerJournal of Neurophysiology, 2004
- In vivo insular cortex LTP induced by brain-derived neurotrophic factorBrain Research, 2003
- Fast track:Unilateral vibrissae stimulation during waking induces interhemispheric EEG asymmetry during subsequent sleep in the ratJournal of Sleep Research, 2000
- Regulation of synaptic responses to high-frequency stimulation and LTP by neurotrophins in the hippocampusNature, 1996