| Literature DB >> 25926773 |
Carina Fernandes1, Nuno Barbosa F Rocha2, Susana Rocha3, Andrea Herrera-Solís4, José Salas-Pacheco5, Fabio García-García6, Eric Murillo-Rodríguez7, Ti-Fei Yuan8, Sergio Machado9, Oscar Arias-Carrión4.
Abstract
Adult mammalian brains continuously generate new neurons, a phenomenon called adult neurogenesis. Both environmental stimuli and endogenous factors are important regulators of adult neurogenesis. Sleep has an important role in normal brain physiology and its disturbance causes very stressful conditions, which disrupt normal brain physiology. Recently, an influence of sleep in adult neurogenesis has been established, mainly based on sleep deprivation studies. This review provides an overview on how rhythms and sleep cycles regulate hippocampal and subventricular zone neurogenesis, discussing some potential underlying mechanisms. In addition, our review highlights some interacting points between sleep and adult neurogenesis in brain function, such as learning, memory, and mood states, and provides some insights on the effects of antidepressants and hypnotic drugs on adult neurogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: adult neurogenesis; antidepressants; circadian rhythms; hippocampus; hypnotic drugs; sleep
Year: 2015 PMID: 25926773 PMCID: PMC4396387 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2015.00140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Regulatory factors of adult neurogenesis.
| Regulatory factors | Implications on adult neurogenesis | Potential mechanisms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Influence neurogenesis in the SGZ | |||
| Cell proliferation in the SGZ is higher in females | Ovarian hormone levels (estrogen) | ||
| Decrease cell proliferation in the SVZ and SGZ | Increased levels of corticosteroids | ||
| Estrogen | Stimulate neurogenesis in the SGZ | ||
| Corticosterone | Decrease neurogenesis in the SGZ | Activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) | |
| Prolactin | Stimulate neurogenesis in the SGZ and SVZ | Activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase 5 | |
| Dopamine | Decrease neurogenesis | Dopamine D2L receptors | |
| Serotonin | Increase neurogenesis | Serotonin-1A receptors | |
| Acetylcholine | Decrease neurogenesis | ||
| Glutamate | Decrease neurogenesis | Metabotropic glutamate receptors, NMDA receptors | |
| Nitric oxide | Decrease neurogenesis | ||
| Increase the survival of newborn neurons in the SGZ | Peripheral vascular endothelial growth factor | ||
| Promote cell proliferation and survival in the SGZ | Peripheral vascular endothelial growth factor | ||
| Decrease cell proliferation and amount of new neurons in the SGZ | Activation of the HPA | ||
| Increased neurogenesis in the SGZ | Brain-derived neurotrophic factor | ||
| Decrease cell proliferation and survival in the SGZ |
Effects of sleep deprivation on hippocampal neurogenesis.
| Experimental model | Effects of sleep deprivation | Limitations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult male | Dentate gyrus cell proliferation was 39% reduced in the first group and 36% reduced in the second group | Corticosterone levels were not controlled. Cell proliferation was not analyzed by hippocampal areas | |
| Adult male | Cell proliferation was significantly reduced in the SGZ of the animals prolonged sleep-deprived. This reduction persisted by 1 and 3 weeks and it was eliminated in adrenalectomized animals | Sleep stages deprived and daily exercise were not controlled. Cell proliferation was not analyzed by hippocampal areas. The results can be influenced by low levels of corticosterone | |
| Male C57Bl/6 mice were acute sleep-deprived (10–12 h) by the ‘gentle handling’ method | Basal rate of cell proliferation in the SGZ was not affected | Sleep stages deprived and daily exercise were not controlled | |
| Treadmill sleep-deprived and treadmill control group of rats were sleep-deprived for 96 h on a treadmill that moved either for 3 s on/12 s off or for 15 m on/60 m, respectively. A cage control group was undisturbed | The number of proliferating cells in the dentate gyrus was 54% reduced in the first group comparatively with the second and 68% reduced comparatively with the control group | Sleep stages deprived, corticosterone levels and daily exercise were not controlled | |
| An intermittent treadmill deprivation system was used to sleep-deprived rats for 96 h | Proliferation of new neurons was reduced by 50% after 96 h of sleep deprivation and 3 weeks after, mature cells with neuronal phenotype was 35% reduced | Sleep stages deprived, levels of corticosterone and daily exercise were not controlled. | |
| Sleep fragmentation reduced proliferating cells by 32% | Levels of corticosterone and daily exercise were not controlled. Cell proliferation was not analyzed by hippocampal areas | ||
| Rats were sleep-restricted by drums slowly rotating for 1 day or repeatedly for 20 h/day, during 8 days | Acute sleep deprivation significantly decreased hippocampal cell proliferation in the hilus. Prolonged partial sleep deprivation decreased cell proliferation in the hilus and SGZ | Sleep stages deprived, levels of corticosterone and daily exercise were not controlled. The results can be influenced by chronic forced activity | |
| Adolescent male rats were: chronic partial sleep-deprived by slowly rotating drums; forced to walk by rotating drums at double speed; and undisturbed. Anxiety, anhedonia and HPA axis activity was assessed. | Hippocampal volume was significantly reduced in the first group but this did not significantly alter survival of newborn cells | Sleep stages deprived was not controlled. Cell proliferation was not analyzed by hippocampal areas | |
| Rats were REMS-suppressed for 4 days by a treadmill. Control animals received the same stimulus randomly during sleep stages | The proliferation of hippocampal cells was 63% reduced by REMS loss | REMS deprivation can change NREMS or waking behavior that may be essential for cell proliferation | |
| Intact and adrenalectomized male rats were REMS-deprived for 96 h, using multiple and single-platform methods | Cell proliferation was 50% reduced in intact and adrenalectomized that received corticosterone replacement via subcutaneous minipumps | REMS deprivation can change NREMS or waking behavior that may be essential for cell proliferation. Low levels of corticosterone can promote cell proliferation | |
| Male | Only REMS deprivation suppressed cell proliferation, by 50%. | REMS deprivation can change NREMS or waking behavior that may be essential for cell proliferation. Low levels of corticosterone can promote cell proliferation | |
| Rats were sleep-deprived for 12 h, by gentle handling | Cell proliferation and total number of surviving cells increased in the SGZ after sleep deprivation, as well as 15 and 30 days after | Levels of corticosterone, sleep stages and daily exercise were not controlled. Cell proliferation was not analyzed by hippocampal areas | |
| Rats were sleep-deprived for 6, 12, 24, 36, or 48 h, by slowly rotating wheels | Proliferating cells in the SGZ increased significantly after 12 h of sleep deprivation but tended to decrease after 48 h of sleep deprivation. | Sleep stages and daily exercise were not controlled |
Effects of hypnotic and antidepressant drugs on neurogenesis.
| Drug | Effects on neurogenesis | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Zolpidem (hypnotic drug) was administered in aged and young adults rats twice daily, at the onset and middle of the rest phase, for 2 days (acute study) or 21 days (chronic study) | Acute administration produced a suppression on cell proliferation in the aged (30–40%) and young adults (10–15%), larger in the hilus than in the SGZ. Chronic administration produced a small reduction of cell survival in the SGZ of young animals and a slight increase in aged animals | |
| Modafinil or caffeine (psychostimulant drugs) were administered in rats total sleep-deprived for 2 days | Prevented decline in neuronal proliferation and differentiation after sleep deprivation | |
| Different classes of antidepressants (MAOI; SSRI; TCA) and electroconvulsive seizure were tested in adult male | Chronic administration of electroconvulsive seizures enhance proliferating cells by 50%, while different classes of antidepressant increased proliferating cells by 20–40% | |
| A non-antidepressant psychotropic drug (Haloperidol) was tested in adult male | Chronic administration did not significantly alter the number of BrdU-positive cells | |
| The number of cells in the dentate gyrus were compared between | MDD treated patients had a increase in neuronal progenitors and a larger dentate gyrus volume. Dividing cells were greater in MDD patients treated with TCAs. The increase of neuronal progenitors and dividing cells was localized on the rostral dentate gyrus. |