Author:
Peng Beibei,Foilb Allison R.,Manasian Yunona,Li Yan,Deng Xin,Meloni Edward G.,Ressler Kerry J.,Carlezon William A.,Bolshakov Vadim Y.
Abstract
AbstractCombining mouse genetics, electrophysiology, and behavioral training and testing, we explored how sleep disruption may affect the function of anxiety-controlling circuits, focusing on projections from the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) to CRF-positive cells in the lateral division of the central amygdala (CeL). We found in Crh-IRES-Cre::Ai14(tdTomato) reporter female mice that 6 hours of sleep disruption during their non-active (light) cycle may be anxiogenic. Notably, the AMPAR/NMDAR EPSC amplitude ratio at the BLA inputs to CRF-CeL cells (CRFCeL), assessed with whole-cell recordings inex vivoexperiments, was enhanced in slices from sleep-disrupted mice, whereas paired-pulse ratio (PPR) of the EPSCs induced by two closely spaced presynaptic stimuli remained unchanged. These findings indicate that sleep disruption-associated synaptic enhancements in glutamatergic projections from the BLA to CRF-CeL neurons may be postsynaptically expressed. We found also that the excitation/inhibition (E/I) ratio in the BLA to CRFCeLinputs was increased in sleep-disrupted mice, suggesting that the functional efficiency of excitation in BLA inputs to CRFCeLcells has increased following sleep disruption, thus resulting in their enhanced activation. The latter could be translated into enhanced anxiogenesis as activation of CRF cells in the CeL was shown to promote anxiety-like behaviors.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory