Literature DB >> 14998234

Sleep deprivation and cellular responses to oxidative stress.

Anupama Gopalakrishnan1, Li Li Ji, Chiara Cirelli.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: It has been hypothesized that sleep deprivation represents an oxidative challenge for the brain and that sleep may have a protective role against oxidative damage. This study was designed to test this hypothesis by measuring in rats the effects of sleep loss on markers of oxidative stress (oxidant production and antioxidant enzyme activities) as well as on markers of cellular oxidative damage (lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation).
DESIGN: The analyses were performed in the brain and in peripheral tissues (liver and skeletal muscle), after short-term sleep deprivation (8 hours), after long-term sleep deprivation (3-14 days), and during recovery sleep after 1 week of sleep loss. Short-term sleep deprivation was performed by gentle handling; long-term sleep deprivation was performed using the disk-over-water method.
SETTING: Sleep research laboratory at University of Wisconsin-Madison. PARTICIPANTS AND
INTERVENTIONS: Adult male Wistar Kyoto rats (n = 69) implanted for polygraphic (electroencephalogram, electromyogram) recording. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: Aliquots of brain, liver, or skeletal muscle homogenate were used to assess oxidant production, superoxide dismutase activity, lipid peroxidation, and protein oxidation. No evidence of oxidative damage was observed at the lipid and/or at the protein level in long-term sleep-deprived animals relative to their yoked controls, nor in the cerebral cortex or in peripheral tissues. Also, no consistent change in antioxidant enzymatic activities was found after prolonged sleep deprivation, nor was any evidence of increased oxidant production in the brain or in peripheral tissues.
CONCLUSION: The available data do not support the assumption that prolonged wakefulness may cause oxidative damage, nor that it can represent an oxidative stress for the brain or for peripheral tissue such as liver and skeletal muscle.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14998234     DOI: 10.1093/sleep/27.1.27

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep        ISSN: 0161-8105            Impact factor:   5.849


  58 in total

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4.  Sleep fragmentation induces cognitive deficits via nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase-dependent pathways in mouse.

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5.  Changes in components of energy regulation in mouse cortex with increases in wakefulness.

Authors:  Elena V Nikonova; Nirinjini Naidoo; Lin Zhang; Micah Romer; Jacqueline R Cater; Matthew T Scharf; Raymond J Galante; Allan I Pack
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6.  Proteomic profiling of the rat cerebral cortex in sleep and waking.

Authors:  C Cirelli; M Pfister-Genskow; D McCarthy; R Woodbury; G Tononi
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Review 7.  The genetic and molecular regulation of sleep: from fruit flies to humans.

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Review 8.  Oxidative stress, cancer, and sleep deprivation: is there a logical link in this association?

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9.  Sleep deprivation increases oleoylethanolamide in human cerebrospinal fluid.

Authors:  Dagmar Koethe; Daniela Schreiber; Andrea Giuffrida; Christian Mauss; Johannes Faulhaber; Bernd Heydenreich; Martin Hellmich; Rudolf Graf; Joachim Klosterkötter; Daniele Piomelli; F Markus Leweke
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Review 10.  Mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction in obstructive sleep apnea.

Authors:  Amy Atkeson; Sanja Jelic
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