STUDY OBJECTIVES: In addition to enhancing sleep onset and maintenance, a desirable insomnia therapeutic agent would preserve healthy sleep's ability to wake and respond to salient situations while maintaining sleep during irrelevant noise. Dual orexin receptor antagonists (DORAs) promote sleep by selectively inhibiting wake-promoting neuropeptide signaling, unlike global inhibition of central nervous system excitation by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-A receptor (GABAaR) modulators. We evaluated the effect of DORA versus GABAaR modulators on underlying sleep architecture, ability to waken to emotionally relevant stimuli versus neutral auditory cues, and performance on a sleepiness-sensitive cognitive task upon awakening. METHODS: DORA-22 and GABAaR modulators (eszopiclone, diazepam) were evaluated in adult male rhesus monkeys (n = 34) with continuous polysomnography recordings in crossover studies of sleep architecture, arousability to a classically conditioned salient versus neutral acoustical stimulus, and psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) performance if awakened. RESULTS: All compounds decreased wakefulness, but only DORA-22 sleep resembled unmedicated sleep in terms of underlying sleep architecture, preserved ability to awaken to salient-conditioned acoustic stimuli while maintaining sleep during neutral acoustic stimuli, and no congnitive impairment in PVT performance. Although GABAaR modulators induced lighter sleep, monkeys rarely woke to salient stimuli and PVT performance was impaired if monkeys were awakened. CONCLUSIONS: In nonhuman primates, DORAs' targeted mechanism for promoting sleep protects the ability to selectively arouse to salient stimuli and perform attentional tasks unimpaired, suggesting meaningful differentiation between a hypnotic agent that works through antagonizing orexin wake signaling versus the sedative hypnotic effects of the GABAaR modulator mechanism of action.
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In addition to enhancing sleep onset and maintenance, a desirable insomnia therapeutic agent would preserve healthy sleep's ability to wake and respond to salient situations while maintaining sleep during irrelevant noise. Dual orexin receptor antagonists (DORAs) promote sleep by selectively inhibiting wake-promoting neuropeptide signaling, unlike global inhibition of central nervous system excitation by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-A receptor (GABAaR) modulators. We evaluated the effect of DORA versus GABAaR modulators on underlying sleep architecture, ability to waken to emotionally relevant stimuli versus neutral auditory cues, and performance on a sleepiness-sensitive cognitive task upon awakening. METHODS: DORA-22 and GABAaR modulators (eszopiclone, diazepam) were evaluated in adult male rhesus monkeys (n = 34) with continuous polysomnography recordings in crossover studies of sleep architecture, arousability to a classically conditioned salient versus neutral acoustical stimulus, and psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) performance if awakened. RESULTS: All compounds decreased wakefulness, but only DORA-22 sleep resembled unmedicated sleep in terms of underlying sleep architecture, preserved ability to awaken to salient-conditioned acoustic stimuli while maintaining sleep during neutral acoustic stimuli, and no congnitive impairment in PVT performance. Although GABAaR modulators induced lighter sleep, monkeys rarely woke to salient stimuli and PVT performance was impaired if monkeys were awakened. CONCLUSIONS: In nonhuman primates, DORAs' targeted mechanism for promoting sleep protects the ability to selectively arouse to salient stimuli and perform attentional tasks unimpaired, suggesting meaningful differentiation between a hypnotic agent that works through antagonizing orexin wake signaling versus the sedative hypnotic effects of the GABAaR modulator mechanism of action.
Authors: Thomas Roth; Catherine Coulouvrat; Goeran Hajak; Matthew D Lakoma; Nancy A Sampson; Victoria Shahly; Alicia C Shillington; Judith J Stephenson; James K Walsh; Ronald C Kessler Journal: Biol Psychiatry Date: 2010-12-31 Impact factor: 13.382
Authors: Christopher J Winrow; Anthony L Gotter; Christopher D Cox; Scott M Doran; Pamela L Tannenbaum; Michael J Breslin; Susan L Garson; Steven V Fox; Charles M Harrell; Joanne Stevens; Duane R Reiss; Donghui Cui; Paul J Coleman; John J Renger Journal: J Neurogenet Date: 2011-04-08 Impact factor: 1.250
Authors: Steven V Fox; Anthony L Gotter; Spencer J Tye; Susan L Garson; Alan T Savitz; Jason M Uslaner; Joseph I Brunner; Pamela L Tannenbaum; Terrence P McDonald; Robert Hodgson; Lihang Yao; Mark R Bowlby; Scott D Kuduk; Paul J Coleman; Richard Hargreaves; Christopher J Winrow; John J Renger Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology Date: 2013-05-31 Impact factor: 7.853
Authors: Anthony L Gotter; Christopher J Winrow; Joseph Brunner; Susan L Garson; Steven V Fox; Jacquelyn Binns; Charles M Harrell; Donghui Cui; Ka Lai Yee; Mark Stiteler; Joanne Stevens; Alan Savitz; Pamela L Tannenbaum; Spencer J Tye; Terrence McDonald; Leon Yao; Scott D Kuduk; Jason Uslaner; Paul J Coleman; John J Renger Journal: BMC Neurosci Date: 2013-08-28 Impact factor: 3.288
Authors: Christopher L Drake; David A Kalmbach; Philip Cheng; Thomas Roth; Kieulinh Michelle Tran; Andrea Cuamatzi-Castelan; Rachel Atkinson; Meeta Singh; Christine V Tonnu; Cynthia Fellman-Couture Journal: J Clin Sleep Med Date: 2019-09-15 Impact factor: 4.062
Authors: Thomas C Neylan; Anne Richards; Thomas J Metzler; Leslie M Ruoff; Jonathan Varbel; Aoife O'Donovan; Melinda Sivasubramanian; Terri Motraghi; Jennifer Hlavin; Steven L Batki; Sabra S Inslicht; Kristin Samuelson; Stephen R Morairty; Thomas S Kilduff Journal: Sleep Date: 2020-10-13 Impact factor: 5.849
Authors: Anushka V Goonawardena; Stephen R Morairty; Ryan Dell; Gabriel A Orellana; Marius C Hoener; Tanya L Wallace; Thomas S Kilduff Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology Date: 2019-04-06 Impact factor: 7.853
Authors: Christopher L Robinson; Rajesh Supra; Evan Downs; Saurabh Kataria; Katelyn Parker; Alan Kaye; Omar Viswanath; Ivan Urits Journal: Health Psychol Res Date: 2022-08-30
Authors: Joshua D Vardigan; Andrea K Houghton; Henry S Lange; Emily D Adarayan; Parul S Pall; Jeanine E Ballard; Darrell A Henze; Jason M Uslaner Journal: J Pain Res Date: 2018-04-11 Impact factor: 3.133