Enhanced Histaminergic Neurotransmission and Sleep-Wake Alterations, a Study in Histamine H3-Receptor Knock-Out Mice
Enhanced Histaminergic Neurotransmission and Sleep-Wake Alterations, a Study in Histamine H3-Receptor Knock-Out Mice
Long-term abolition of a brain arousal system impairs wakefulness (W), but little is known about the consequences of long-term enhancement. The brain histaminergic arousal system is under the negative control of H3-autoreceptors whose deletion results in permanent enhancement of histamine (HA) turnover. In order to determine the consequences of enhancement of the histaminergic system, we compared the cortical EEG and sleep-wake states of H3-receptor knockout (H3R-/-) and wild-type mouse littermates. We found that H3R-/-mice had rich phenotypes. On the one hand, they showed clear signs of enhanced HA neurotransmission and vigilance, i.e., a higher EEG θ power during spontaneous W and a greater extent of W or sleep restriction during behavioral tasks, including environmental change, locomotion, and motivation tests. On the other hand, during the baseline dark period, they displayed deficient W and signs of sleep deterioration, such as pronounced sleep fragmentation and reduced cortical slow activity during slow wave sleep (SWS), most likely due to a desensitization of postsynaptic histaminergic receptors as a result of constant HA release. Ciproxifan (H3-receptor inverse agonist) enhanced W in wild-type mice, but not in H3R-/-mice, indicating a functional deletion of H3-receptors, whereas triprolidine (postsynaptic H1-receptor antagonist) or α-fluoromethylhistidine (HA-synthesis inhibitor) caused a greater SWS increase in H3R-/- than in wild-type mice, consistent with enhanced HA neurotransmission. These sleep-wake characteristics and the obesity phenotypes previously reported in this animal model suggest that chronic enhancement of histaminergic neurotransmission eventually compromises the arousal system, leading to sleep-wake, behavioral, and metabolic disorders similar to those caused by voluntary sleep restriction in humans.
- UNIVERSITE JEAN MONNET SAINT-ETIENNE France
- LABORATOIRE DE MATHÉMATIQUES DE REIMS - Université de Reims Champagne Ardenne - France
- Lyon Neuroscience Research Center France
- Sun Yat-sen University China (People's Republic of)
- Jean Monnet University France
Male, MESH: Sleep, Knockout, [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio], 610, Inbred C57BL, Synaptic Transmission, [SCCO]Cognitive science, Mice, 616, MESH: Synaptic Transmission, MESH: Up-Regulation, MESH: Receptors, Animals, Receptors, Histamine H3, MESH: Animals, Wakefulness, MESH: Mice, Mice, Knockout, MESH: Sleep Stages, MESH: Male, Up-Regulation, Mice, Inbred C57BL, MESH: Wakefulness, Female, Sleep Stages, Histamine H3, MESH: Histamine, Sleep, MESH: Female, Histamine
Male, MESH: Sleep, Knockout, [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio], 610, Inbred C57BL, Synaptic Transmission, [SCCO]Cognitive science, Mice, 616, MESH: Synaptic Transmission, MESH: Up-Regulation, MESH: Receptors, Animals, Receptors, Histamine H3, MESH: Animals, Wakefulness, MESH: Mice, Mice, Knockout, MESH: Sleep Stages, MESH: Male, Up-Regulation, Mice, Inbred C57BL, MESH: Wakefulness, Female, Sleep Stages, Histamine H3, MESH: Histamine, Sleep, MESH: Female, Histamine
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