Chronic Astrocytic TNFα Production in the Preoptic-Basal Forebrain Causes Aging-like Sleep–Wake Disturbances in Young Mice

Author:

Kostin Andrey1,Alam Md. Aftab12,Saevskiy Anton3ORCID,Alam Md. Noor14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Service (151A3), Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Sepulveda, CA 91343, USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA

3. Scientific Research and Technology Center for Neurotechnology, Southern Federal University, 344006 Rostov-on-Don, Russia

4. Department of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA

Abstract

Sleep disruption is a frequent problem of advancing age, often accompanied by low-grade chronic central and peripheral inflammation. We examined whether chronic neuroinflammation in the preoptic and basal forebrain area (POA-BF), a critical sleep–wake regulatory structure, contributes to this disruption. We developed a targeted viral vector designed to overexpress tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα), specifically in astrocytes (AAV5-GFAP-TNFα-mCherry), and injected it into the POA of young mice to induce heightened neuroinflammation within the POA-BF. Compared to the control (treated with AAV5-GFAP-mCherry), mice with astrocytic TNFα overproduction within the POA-BF exhibited signs of increased microglia activation, indicating a heightened local inflammatory milieu. These mice also exhibited aging-like changes in sleep–wake organization and physical performance, including (a) impaired sleep–wake functions characterized by disruptions in sleep and waking during light and dark phases, respectively, and a reduced ability to compensate for sleep loss; (b) dysfunctional VLPO sleep-active neurons, indicated by fewer neurons expressing c-fos after suvorexant-induced sleep; and (c) compromised physical performance as demonstrated by a decline in grip strength. These findings suggest that inflammation-induced dysfunction of sleep- and wake-regulatory mechanisms within the POA-BF may be a critical component of sleep–wake disturbances in aging.

Funder

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

MDPI AG

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