Probing different paradigms of morphine withdrawal on sleep behavior in male and female C57BL/6J mice

Author:

Bedard Madigan L.ORCID,Lord Julia Sparks,Perez Patric J.ORCID,Bravo Isabel M.,Teklezghi Adonay T.,Tarantino LisaORCID,Diering GrahamORCID,McElligott Zoe A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractOpioid misuse has dramatically increased over the last few decades resulting in many people suffering from opioid use disorder (OUD). The prevalence of opioid overdose has been driven by the development of new synthetic opioids, increased availability of prescription opioids, and more recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. Coinciding with increases in exposure to opioids, the United States has also observed increases in multiple Narcan (naloxone) administrations as life-saving measures for respiratory depression, and, thus, consequently, naloxone-precipitated withdrawal. Sleep dysregulation is a main symptom of OUD and opioid withdrawal syndrome, and therefore, should be a key facet of animal models of OUD. Here we examine the effect of precipitated and spontaneous morphine withdrawal on sleep behaviors in C57BL/6J mice. We find that morphine administration and withdrawal dysregulate sleep, but not equally across morphine exposure paradigms. Furthermore, many environmental triggers promote relapse to drug-seeking/taking behavior, and the stress of disrupted sleep may fall into that category. We find that sleep deprivation dysregulates sleep in mice that had previous opioid withdrawal experience. Our data suggest that the 3-day precipitated withdrawal paradigm has the most profound effects on opioid-induced sleep dysregulation and further validates the construct of this model for opioid dependence and OUD.HighlightsMorphine withdrawal differentially dysregulates the sleep of male and female mice3-day precipitated withdrawal results in larger changes than spontaneous withdrawalOpioid withdrawal affects responses to future sleep deprivation differently between sexes

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference73 articles.

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