Literature DB >> 11382852

Changes in anti-phosphoserine and anti-phosphothreonine antibody binding during the sleep-waking cycle and after lesions of the locus coeruleus.

C Cirelli1, G Tononi.   

Abstract

Cellular responses to many extracellular signals occur through phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of intracellular proteins. To determine whether changes in protein phosphorylation accompany the electrophysiological changes occurring during the sleep-waking cycle, immunocytochemical mapping of cells labeled with anti-phosphoserine and anti-phosphothreonine antibodies was performed on brain sections of sleeping and waking rats. Animals implanted for chronic polysomnographic recordings were sacrificed after either 3h of sleep or 3h of sleep deprivation by gentle handling. Anti-phosphoserine and anti-phosphothreonine staining was mainly localized in neurons and was high in some brain regions, such as cerebral cortex and hypothalamus, and low in others, such as the thalamus. In all cases, the number of cells labeled with either antibody in the cerebral cortex was markedly higher in rats sacrificed after 3h of waking than in rats sacrificed after 3h of sleep. Unilateral lesions of the locus coeruleus by local injection of 6-hydroxydopamine were performed in other animals to determine whether the increase in protein phosphorylation during waking was influenced by the activity of the noradrenergic system, which is higher in waking than in sleep. In animals sacrificed after 3h of spontaneous or forced waking, the number of labeled neurons in the cerebral cortex was decreased on the side in which noradrenergic fibers had been lesioned. These results suggest that 1) neurons exist physiologically in different states of phosphorylation, ranging from a state of very high phosphorylation (e.g., in the cerebral cortex) to a state of very low phosphorylation (e.g., in many thalamic nuclei); 2) the fraction of highly phosphorylated neurons in cerebral cortex is higher in waking than in sleep and 3) part of the immunoreactive phosphorylation present in highly labeled cortical neurons is controlled by the locus coeruleus.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 11382852

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep Res Online        ISSN: 1096-214X


  3 in total

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 6.709

2.  Quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis of the molecular substrates of sleep need.

Authors:  Zhiqiang Wang; Jing Ma; Chika Miyoshi; Yuxin Li; Makito Sato; Yukino Ogawa; Tingting Lou; Chengyuan Ma; Xue Gao; Chiyu Lee; Tomoyuki Fujiyama; Xiaojie Yang; Shuang Zhou; Noriko Hotta-Hirashima; Daniela Klewe-Nebenius; Aya Ikkyu; Miyo Kakizaki; Satomi Kanno; Liqin Cao; Satoru Takahashi; Junmin Peng; Yonghao Yu; Hiromasa Funato; Masashi Yanagisawa; Qinghua Liu
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2018-06-13       Impact factor: 69.504

3.  Aging and sleep deprivation induce the unfolded protein response in the pancreas: implications for metabolism.

Authors:  Nirinjini Naidoo; James G Davis; Jingxu Zhu; Maya Yabumoto; Kristan Singletary; Marishka Brown; Raymond Galante; Beamon Agarwal; Joseph A Baur
Journal:  Aging Cell       Date:  2013-11-12       Impact factor: 9.304

  3 in total

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