| Literature DB >> 27738642 |
G Hurtado-Alvarado1, E Domínguez-Salazar1, L Pavon2, J Velázquez-Moctezuma1, B Gómez-González1.
Abstract
Sleep is a vital phenomenon related to immunomodulation at the central and peripheral level. Sleep deficient in duration and/or quality is a common problem in the modern society and is considered a risk factor to develop neurodegenerative diseases. Sleep loss in rodents induces blood-brain barrier disruption and the underlying mechanism is still unknown. Several reports indicate that sleep loss induces a systemic low-grade inflammation characterized by the release of several molecules, such as cytokines, chemokines, and acute-phase proteins; all of them may promote changes in cellular components of the blood-brain barrier, particularly on brain endothelial cells. In the present review we discuss the role of inflammatory mediators that increase during sleep loss and their association with general disturbances in peripheral endothelium and epithelium and how those inflammatory mediators may alter the blood-brain barrier. Finally, this manuscript proposes a hypothetical mechanism by which sleep loss may induce blood-brain barrier disruption, emphasizing the regulatory effect of inflammatory molecules on tight junction proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27738642 PMCID: PMC5050358 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4576012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Sleep loss procedures.
| Human procedures | Duration | Animal models | Duration | |
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| Sleep deprivation (SD) | (i) Shift working [ | (i) Several days | (i) Modified multiple platform method (REM SD) [ | (i) 3–96 h |
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| Sleep restriction (SR) | (i) Voluntarily SR [ | (i) 3–5 h | (i) Modified multiple platform method [ | (i) 20 h of SD plus 4 h of daily sleep recovery |
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| Sleep fragmentation (SF) | (i) Obstructive apnoea patients [ | (i) Several days | (i) Gentle manipulation coupled to EEG recording [ | (i) 1 to several days |
Sleep deprivation consists of sleep loss without sleep opportunity along a short period; sleep restriction consists of a reduction in total sleep time with short periods of sleep opportunity; and sleep fragmentation consists of multiple awakenings during sleep time.
Inflammatory mediators released during sleep loss that may potentially regulate blood-brain barrier integrity.
| Inflammatory mediator | General changes during sleep loss | General effects on blood-brain barrier |
|---|---|---|
| TNF- | ↑ circulating levels in human and rodents [ | ↑ blood-brain barrier permeability in |
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| IL-1 | ↑ circulating levels in human and rodents [ | ↑ blood-brain barrier permeability in |
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| IL-6 | ↑ circulating levels in human after chronic sleep loss [ | ↓ TEER in cerebrovascular endothelial cells from rats at higher doses but not at lower doses [ |
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| IL-17A | ↑ circulating levels in rodents [ | ↑ blood-brain barrier permeability in |
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| CRP | ↑ circulating levels in humans and rodents [ | ↑ blood-brain barrier permeability in |
TNF: tumor necrosis factor; IL: interleukin; CRP: C-reactive protein; ZO: zonula occludens; MMP-9: matrix metalloproteinase-9; PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cells; ROS: reactive oxygen species; COX; cyclooxygenase; and TEER: transendothelial electric resistance.
Figure 1Potential inflammatory mediators participating in the regulation of blood-brain barrier permeability during sleep loss. The figure shows the platform method to induce sleep loss in the rat. Chronic sleep restriction increases blood-brain barrier permeability to circulating molecules (e.g., Evans blue) and sleep recovery promotes restoration of normal blood-brain barrier permeability. Inflammatory mediators with barrier regulation properties, such as tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and IL-17A, are released during sleep loss conditions and some of them return to basal levels during sleep recovery; others, like IL-17A and TNF-α, are maintained at high levels despite sleep recovery. The barrier changes induced by inflammatory mediators may lead to neuroinflammation and potentially may underlie the cognitive impairments induced by sleep loss.
Figure 2Hypothetical molecular mechanisms mediating sleep loss effect on blood-brain barrier permeability. During sleep loss the increase of soluble inflammatory mediators such as TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-17A, CRP, and VEGF activates several membrane receptors that converge in cellular pathways hallmark of inflammation, for example, the NFκB pathway. The final outcome involves the phosphorylation of tight junction proteins and the generation of actin fiber stress. But also other pathways are potentially activated, such as the NADPH oxidase pathway, leading to ROS generation and the subsequent lipoxidation and protein oxidation. The activation of transcription factors (eg., NFκB) and their translocation to the nuclei may promote the transcription of inflammatory-related genes (e.g., ICAM-1, prostaglandins, and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP)) as well as death-related genes (e.g., caspase 3) and the repression of genes involved in the maintenance of the barrier properties (e.g., claudin-5). Conjointly, all those pathways could lead to increased blood-brain barrier permeability during chronic sleep loss. Cldn5: claudin-5, COX: cyclooxygenase, CRP: C-reactive protein, Fcγ receptor: fragment crystallizable region, ICAM-1: intracellular adhesion molecule-1, IL: interleukin, NADPHox: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase, NFκB: nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer, MMP: matrix metalloproteinase, MLC: myosin light chain, MLCK: myosin light chain kinase, PGE: prostaglandin, PKC: protein kinase C, sICAM: soluble ICAM, sTNFaR: soluble TNF-α receptor, VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor, TNF: tumor necrosis factor, and ZO: zonula occludens.