Urethane is a general anesthetic widely used in animal research. It is unique among anesthetics because urethane anesthesia alternates between macroscopically distinct electrographic states: a slow-wave state that resembles NREM sleep (NREMure), and an activated state with features of both REM sleep and wakefulness (REMure). However, the relationship between urethane anesthesia and physiological sleep is still unclear. In this study, electroencephalography (EEG) and electromyography were recorded in chronically prepared rats during natural sleep-wake states and during urethane anesthesia. We subsequently analyzed the EEG signatures associated with the loss of consciousness and found that, in comparison to natural sleepwake states, the power, coherence, directed connectivity and complexity of brain oscillations are distinct during urethane. We also demonstrate that both urethane states have clear EEG signatures of general anesthesia. Thus, despite superficial similarities that have led others to conclude that urethane is a model of sleep, the electrocortical traits of depressed and activated states during urethane anesthesia differ from physiological sleep states.
The hypocretins (HCRT), also known as orexin, includes two neuroexcitatory peptides, HCRT-1 and HCRT-2 (orexin A y B, respectively), synthesized by neurons located in the postero-lateral hypothalamus, whose projections and receptors are widely distributed throughout the brain, including the medial preoptic area (mPOA). HCRT have been associated with a wide range of physiological functions including sleep-wake cycle, maternal behavior and body temperature, all regulated by the mPOA. Previously we showed that HCRT in the mPOA facilitates certain active maternal behaviors, while the blockade of HCRT-R1 increased the time spent in nursing. As mother rats mainly sleep while they nurse, we hypothesize that HCRT in the mPOA of lactating rats reduce sleep and nursing, while the intra-mPOA administration of the dual orexin receptor antagonist (DORA) would generate the opposite effect. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the role of HCRT within the mPOA, in the regulation and integration of the sleep-wake cycle, maternal behavior and body temperature of lactating rats. To evaluate this idea, we assessed the sleep-wake states, maternal behavior and body temperature of lactating rats following microinjections of HCRT-1 (100 and 200 uM) and DORA (5mM) into the mPOA. As expected, our data shows that HCRT-1 in mPOA promoted wakefulness and a slightly increase in body temperature, whereas DORA increased both NREM and REM sleep along with nursing and milk ejection. Taken together, our results strongly suggest that the reduction of the endogenous HCRT within the mPOA of lactating rats is important to promote sleep, nursing and milk ejection.
The preoptic area (POA) is a brain structure classically involved in a wide variety of animal behavior including sleep and maternal care. In the current study, we evaluate the specific effect of disinhibition of two specific regions of the POA, the medial POA nucleus (mPOA) and the ventrolateral POA area (VLPO) on sleep and maternal behavior in lactating rats. For this purpose, mother rats on postpartum day 1 (PPD1) were implanted for polysomnographic recordings and with bilateral cannulae either in the mPOA or in the VLPO. The rats were tested for sleep and maternal behavior on PPD4-8 after the infusion of the GABA-A antagonist, bicuculline (0, 10 or 30 ng/0.2 μl/side). Infusion of bicuculline into the mPOA augmented retrieving and nest building behaviors and reduced both nursing and milk ejections but had almost no effect on sleep. When bicuculine was microinjected into the VLPO, the rats significantly increase the number of retrievings and mouthings and reduced the nursing time without changes in milk ejections, which was associated with an increase in wakefulness and a reduction in light sleep.
Our results show that disinhibition of the mPOA, a key area in the control of maternal behavior, increased active maternal behaviors and reduced nursing without affecting wakefulness or sleep time. In contrast, the enhancement of some active maternal behaviors when the drug was infused into the VLPO, a sleep-promoting area, with a concomitant increase in wakefulness suggests that mother rats devote this additional waking time in the active maternal care of the pups. We hypothesize that maternal behavior changes after bicuculine microinjection into the VLPO is caused by a reduction in the sleep drive, rather than a direct effect on maternal behavior.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.