Publication | Closed Access
MicroRNA 132 alters sleep and varies with time in brain
45
Citations
50
References
2011
Year
Sleep DisordersNeurophysiological BiomarkersSleep IntensityOptogeneticsEpigeneticsSocial SciencesSleep MedicineSleep PhysiologyNeurologyNeurogeneticsSleepMicrorna DetectionSleep DeprivationSleep DisorderNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyMicrorna 132PhysiologyNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologySmall RnaMedicineSleep RegulationNon-coding Rna
MicroRNA (miRNA) levels in brain are altered by sleep deprivation; however, the direct effects of any miRNA on sleep have not heretofore been described. We report herein that intracerebroventricular application of a miRNA-132 mimetic (preMIR-132) decreased duration of non-rapid-eye-movement sleep (NREMS) while simultaneously increasing duration of rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) during the light phase. Further, preMIR-132 decreased electroencephalographic (EEG) slow-wave activity (SWA) during NREMS, an index of sleep intensity. In separate experiments unilateral supracortical application of preMIR-132 ipsilaterally decreased EEG SWA during NREMS but did not alter global sleep duration. In addition, after ventricular or supracortical injections of preMIR-132, the mimetic-induced effects were state specific, occurring only during NREMS. After local supracortical injections of the mimetic, cortical miRNA-132 levels were higher at the time sleep-related EEG effects were manifest. We also report that spontaneous cortical levels of miRNA-132 were lower at the end of the sleep-dominant light period compared with at the end of the dark period in rats. Results suggest that miRNAs play a regulatory role in sleep and provide a new tool for investigating sleep regulation.
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