Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.

Age-related cognitive deficits negatively affect quality of life and can presage serious neurodegenerative disorders. Despite sleep disruption's well-recognized negative influence on cognition, and its prevalence with age, surprisingly few studies have tested sleep's relationship to cognit...

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Main Authors: Heather M Buechel, Jelena Popovic, James L Searcy, Nada M Porter, Olivier Thibault, Eric M Blalock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-04-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3070733?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-cca6ecae816242c5837ed1b44adcef452020-11-25T01:00:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-04-0164e1838710.1371/journal.pone.0018387Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.Heather M BuechelJelena PopovicJames L SearcyNada M PorterOlivier ThibaultEric M BlalockAge-related cognitive deficits negatively affect quality of life and can presage serious neurodegenerative disorders. Despite sleep disruption's well-recognized negative influence on cognition, and its prevalence with age, surprisingly few studies have tested sleep's relationship to cognitive aging.We measured sleep stages in young adult and aged F344 rats during inactive (enhanced sleep) and active (enhanced wake) periods. Animals were behaviorally characterized on the Morris water maze and gene expression profiles of their parietal cortices were taken.Water maze performance was impaired, and inactive period deep sleep was decreased with age. However, increased deep sleep during the active period was most strongly correlated to maze performance. Transcriptional profiles were strongly associated with behavior and age, and were validated against prior studies. Bioinformatic analysis revealed increased translation and decreased myelin/neuronal pathways.The F344 rat appears to serve as a reasonable model for some common sleep architecture and cognitive changes seen with age in humans, including the cognitively disrupting influence of active period deep sleep. Microarray analysis suggests that the processes engaged by this sleep are consistent with its function. Thus, active period deep sleep appears temporally misaligned but mechanistically intact, leading to the following: first, aged brain tissue appears capable of generating the slow waves necessary for deep sleep, albeit at a weaker intensity than in young. Second, this activity, presented during the active period, seems disruptive rather than beneficial to cognition. Third, this active period deep sleep may be a cognitively pathologic attempt to recover age-related loss of inactive period deep sleep. Finally, therapeutic strategies aimed at reducing active period deep sleep (e.g., by promoting active period wakefulness and/or inactive period deep sleep) may be highly relevant to cognitive function in the aging community.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3070733?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather M Buechel
Jelena Popovic
James L Searcy
Nada M Porter
Olivier Thibault
Eric M Blalock
spellingShingle Heather M Buechel
Jelena Popovic
James L Searcy
Nada M Porter
Olivier Thibault
Eric M Blalock
Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Heather M Buechel
Jelena Popovic
James L Searcy
Nada M Porter
Olivier Thibault
Eric M Blalock
author_sort Heather M Buechel
title Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
title_short Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
title_full Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
title_fullStr Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
title_full_unstemmed Deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
title_sort deep sleep and parietal cortex gene expression changes are related to cognitive deficits with age.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-04-01
description Age-related cognitive deficits negatively affect quality of life and can presage serious neurodegenerative disorders. Despite sleep disruption's well-recognized negative influence on cognition, and its prevalence with age, surprisingly few studies have tested sleep's relationship to cognitive aging.We measured sleep stages in young adult and aged F344 rats during inactive (enhanced sleep) and active (enhanced wake) periods. Animals were behaviorally characterized on the Morris water maze and gene expression profiles of their parietal cortices were taken.Water maze performance was impaired, and inactive period deep sleep was decreased with age. However, increased deep sleep during the active period was most strongly correlated to maze performance. Transcriptional profiles were strongly associated with behavior and age, and were validated against prior studies. Bioinformatic analysis revealed increased translation and decreased myelin/neuronal pathways.The F344 rat appears to serve as a reasonable model for some common sleep architecture and cognitive changes seen with age in humans, including the cognitively disrupting influence of active period deep sleep. Microarray analysis suggests that the processes engaged by this sleep are consistent with its function. Thus, active period deep sleep appears temporally misaligned but mechanistically intact, leading to the following: first, aged brain tissue appears capable of generating the slow waves necessary for deep sleep, albeit at a weaker intensity than in young. Second, this activity, presented during the active period, seems disruptive rather than beneficial to cognition. Third, this active period deep sleep may be a cognitively pathologic attempt to recover age-related loss of inactive period deep sleep. Finally, therapeutic strategies aimed at reducing active period deep sleep (e.g., by promoting active period wakefulness and/or inactive period deep sleep) may be highly relevant to cognitive function in the aging community.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3070733?pdf=render
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