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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 1, 1999, 19(19):8656-8664
High Corticosterone Levels in Prenatally Stressed Rats Predict
Persistent Paradoxical Sleep Alterations
C.
Dugovic1,
S.
Maccari2,
L.
Weibel3,
F. W.
Turek3, and
and O.
Van
Reeth3
1 Department of Neuropsychopharmacology, Janssen
Research Foundation, 2340 Beerse, Belgium, 2 Laboratoire
Neurosciences du Comportement, Université de Lille, 59655 Villeneuve d'Ascq, France, and 3 Center for the Study of
Biological Rhythms, School of Medicine, Erasme Hospital,
Université Libre de Bruxelles, 1070 Brussels, Belgium
Prenatal stress predisposes rats to long-lasting disturbances that
persist throughout adulthood (e.g., high anxiety, dysfunction of the
hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, and abnormal circadian timing).
These disturbances parallel to a large extent those found in depressed
patients, in which hypercortisolemia and sleep alterations may be
related to stress-inducing events. We studied sleep-wake parameters in
control and prenatally stressed adult rats (3-4 months old) and
examined possible relationships with their corticosterone levels
(determined at 2 months of age). Under baseline conditions, prenatally
stressed rats showed increased amounts of paradoxical sleep, positively
correlated to plasma corticosterone levels. Other changes include
increased sleep fragmentation, total light slow-wave sleep time, and a
slight decrease in the percentage of deep slow-wave sleep relative to
total sleep time. During recovery sleep from acute restraint stress,
all sleep changes persisted and were correlated with stress-induced
corticosterone secretion. High corticosterone levels under baseline
conditions as well as an acute stress challenge may thus predict
long-term sleep-wake alterations in rats. Taken together with other
behavioral and hormonal abnormalities in prenatally stressed animals,
the pronounced changes in sleep-wake parameters that are similar to
those found in depressed patients suggest that prenatal stress may be a
useful animal model of depression.
Key words:
prenatal stress; sleep-wake parameters; paradoxical
sleep; corticosterone; restraint stress; rat
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19198656-09$05.00/0
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