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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5679-5686
Prostaglandin D Synthase in the Prenatal Ovine Brain and Effects
of Its Inhibition with Selenium Chloride on Fetal Sleep/Wake Activity
In Utero
Brenda
Lee,
Jonathan J.
Hirst, and
David W.
Walker
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 3800
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ABSTRACT |
It has been proposed that prostaglandin (PG) D2 induces
physiological sleep in mammals by acting on sleep centers located in
the anterior hypothalamus. In fetal sheep, definitive
rapid-eye-movement and non-rapid-eye-movement sleep states
appear at ~125 d gestation (term is ~147 d). In adult animals, PGD
synthase (PGDS) (functionally and structurally homologous to -trace
protein) is secreted into CSF with a circadian pattern, with the
highest concentrations present during sleep. In this study we show that
PGDS/ -trace protein is present in fetal sheep CSF at 125 and
135 d gestation but not at 90 d gestation.
SeCl4, a specific inhibitor of PGDS, was given to
unanesthetized fetal sheep (130-140 d gestation) by
intracerebroventricular infusion at a dose of 25, 100, 500, or 1000 pmol/min for 4 hr. Artificial CSF was infused in control experiments.
Arousal behavior, defined as the presence of nuchal muscle
electromyogram activity, electro-ocular activity, and breathing movements during low-amplitude electrocortical activity, increased from
3.8 ± 1 min/hr to 6.6 ± 0.5 and 7.0 ± 0.3 min/hr at
doses of 100 and 500 pmol/min, respectively
(p < 0.05). SeCl4 at 25 and
1000 pmol/min had no significant effect on arousal activity. Infusion
of PGD2 at 500 pmol/min intracerebroventricularly for 4 hr
decreased the incidence of arousal from 3.8 ± 0.5 min/hr to
0.7 ± 0.3 min/hr (p < 0.05). When 500 pmol/min PGD2 was infused immediately after a 4 hr infusion
of SeCl4 (500 pmol/min), the SeCl4-induced
increase in arousal behavior was abolished. Together, the presence of
PGDS/ -trace protein in fetal CSF in late gestation and the effects
of SeCl4 in increasing the incidence of arousal-like behavior suggest that PGD2 has a role in the induction and
maintenance of prenatal sleep.
Key words:
fetus; sleep/wake; arousal; prostaglandin D
synthase; -trace protein; selenium chloride
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INTRODUCTION |
In species with long gestations,
considerable brain development occurs before birth; EEG and locomotor
activities suggestive of sleep become evident by late gestation (Dawes
et al., 1972 ; Rucke-busch et al., 1977 ; Clewlow et al., 1983 ;
Szeto, 1992 ). In the sheep fetus, rapid-eye-movement (REM) and
non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep, defined by the coordinated and
regular changes in the electrocorticogram (ECoG), postural muscle
electromyogram (EMG), electro-oculogram (EOG) activity, and
episodes of breathing movements, are established by ~125 d (term
~147 d) gestation (Clewlow et al., 1983 ). These REM- and NREM-like
episodes together account for ~95% of the total time (Dawes et al.,
1972 ; Szeto and Hinman, 1985 ). The remaining time is occupied by brief
periods identified as fetal arousal or wakefulness and characterized,
as in the adult, by episodes of low-amplitude ECoG activity occurring
simultaneously with EOG and nuchal muscle activities and augmented
breathing movements (Szeto, 1992 ; Crossley et al., 1997 ; Nicol et al.,
1998 , 2001 ).
It is not known why the propensity to sleep is so high in fetal life.
The placenta appears to have an influence over fetal CNS activity
(Adamson et al., 1987 ), arising perhaps from the low-oxygen environment
that results from the high oxidative metabolism of the placenta, or
because somnogenic substances, especially neuroactive metabolites of
progesterone, are released into fetal blood. Suprapontine control of
fetal sleep was suggested by the observation that collicular
transection disrupted the normal pattern of REM and NREM episodes
(Dawes et al., 1983 ). However, little is known of the higher centers
that might control the activity of the brainstem reticular network in
the fetus and lead to the high incidence of sleep and low incidence of
wakefulness in utero.
The anterior hypothalamus plays an essential role in sleep regulation
(Sherin et al., 1996 ). It has been suggested that sleep induction occurs when prostaglandin (PG)
D2 activates GABAergic neurons in the
ventrolateral preoptic (VLPO) region, which then inhibits histaminergic
neurons in the posterior hypothalamus (Scammell et al., 1998 ).
Extensive evidence suggests that PGD2, formed
from PGH2 by the enzyme prostaglandin D synthase
(PGDS), acts to induce physiological sleep (Hayaishi et al., 1993 ;
Matsumura et al., 1994 ; Urade and Hayaishi, 1999 ; Hayaishi, 2000 ). PGDS
has structural and functional homology to -trace protein, a major
constituent of CSF in humans and other species (Hoffman et al., 1993 )
with enzymatic properties similar to those of brain PGDS (Watanabe et
al., 1994 ). PGDS/ -trace mRNA is found predominantly in choroid plexus and leptomeningeal cells (Urade et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Hoffman et
al., 1996 ; Ohe et al., 1996 ), and the protein is secreted into CSF.
PGD2 concentrations in CSF exhibit a circadian
pattern (Pandley et al., 1995 ) and increase in CSF during sleep in the
adult (Ram et al., 1997 ).
The question arises as to whether PGD2 is an
endogenous sleep substance in the fetus, as it is in the adult. This
study was designed to investigate whether PGD2 is
involved in the maintenance of fetal sleep, first by determining
whether PGDS was present in the CSF of fetal sheep and whether changes
of content occurred in gestation around the time that sleep states
first become evident; and second by making use of the observation that
inorganic selenium compounds inhibit PGDS activity (Islam et al., 1991 ;
Matsumura et al., 1991 ). SeCl4 was infused into a
lateral ventricle of fetal sheep in utero while
recording sleep states, postural muscle activity, and breathing
movements. Selenium compounds are specific and reversible inhibitors of
brain-type PGDS because of their interaction with the
cysteine-65 residue within the hydrophobic pocket of the enzyme, a
structural feature of PGDS not shared with other members of the
lipocalin superfamily (Nagata et al., 1991 ; Hayaishi, 2000 ). Infusion of SeCl4 or PGD2
alone and replacement of PGD2 after SeCl4 treatment established that
PGD2 induces sleep and that inhibition of PGDS
with SeCl4 induces increased amounts of an
awake-like, aroused state in fetal sheep.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals
Merino-Border Leicester crossbred ewes, which carry fetuses to
147 d gestation, were used in accordance with the rules of the
Standing Committee on Ethics in Animal Experimentation of Monash
University. The ewes were brought to the animal house and held together
under artificially lit conditions on a 12 hr light/dark cycle for
at least 5 d before surgery (n = 13) or before
they were killed to collect the fetal brain (n = 9).
Ex vivo studies: immunodetection of prostaglandin
D synthase
Fetal CSF and brain samples were collected at gestational ages
of 90, 125, and 135 d (n = 3, each group). CSF was
collected through a 23 gauge needle by puncturing the atlanto-occipital membrane immediately after the ewe had been killed and the fetus had
been removed from the uterus. The fetal brain was then removed from the
skull, the choroid plexus was removed from the lateral ventricles, and
the remainder of the brain was divided into gross anatomical segments.
The choroid plexus and brain samples were then frozen in liquid
nitrogen. Samples of fetal liver and muscle were also collected for use
as negative controls. At assay, the choroid plexus and selected
segments of brain were weighed, pulverized on dry ice using an air
hammer, and then homogenized in fresh buffer (in
M: 0.1 phosphate, 0.32 sucrose, and 0.1 phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, pH 6) using an Ultra-Turrax
(Janke and Kunkel GmbH, Staufen, Germany) homogenizer. The
supernatant collected after centrifugation was subjected to SDS-PAGE
electrophoresis on 12% acrylamide gel with a 4% stacking gel cast
immediately before use. A lane containing protein standards between 14 and 97.4 kDa was included on each gel. Samples prepared from whole
cortexes of adult rats (n = 3) and samples of human CSF
collected by spinal lumbar puncture (gift from Dr. Samantha Richardson,
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia) were used as positive
controls. The proteins were transferred from the gel to a
nitrocellulose membrane by electrophoresis at 4°C; complete transfer
was confirmed subsequently by absence of Coomassie blue staining of the
gel. The membrane was then treated with a protein blocking buffer (0.1 M phosphate, 0.05% Triton X-100, and 3% nonfat
powered milk), and incubated for 1 hr with a 1:5000 dilution of a
polyclonal antibody raised against -trace protein purified from
human CSF (gift from Professor M. Mader, University of
Gottingen, Gottingen, Germany). After washing thoroughly in 0.1 M phosphate buffer containing 0.05% Triton
X-100, the membrane was incubated for 1 hr in secondary antibody (goat
anti-rabbit; 1:10,000) conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, and the
bound antibody complex was visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence
(ECL kit; Amersham Biosciences, Little Chalfont, UK) and
exposure to film (Biomax Light; Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY). The
level of -trace protein on the membrane was quantitated using
the Image Tool program from the University of Texas Health Science
Center (San Antonio, TX).
In utero studies
Surgery. The animals fasted for 24 hr before surgery
at 125-126 d gestation for the long-term implantation of catheters and electrodes. The ewe was anesthetized using 1.5-2% halothane in oxygen
for the implantation of maternal and fetal carotid artery and jugular
vein catheters and the placement of catheters into the midcervical
region of the fetal trachea and the amniotic sac. Pairs of
multistranded stainless-steel wires (Cooner Wire Co., Chatsworth, CA)
were sewn bilaterally into the nuchal muscles to measure EMG activity
and subcutaneously at the margins of the orbit of one eye to measure
the EOG (Clewlow et al., 1983 ). ECoG activity was recorded bilaterally
from a pair of electrodes inserted through 1 mm diameter holes drilled
through the skull over the parietal cortex. The bared ends of the
insulated wires were inserted through the holes to rest on the dura,
and the wires were then secured to the skull with cyanoacrylate glue.
An indwelling cannula (inner diameter, 0.6 mm; Intracath; Terumo
Medical Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) was then inserted into one
lateral ventricle using a 22 gauge needle, as described previously
(Hirst et al., 2000 ). After the needle and cannula had been inserted
into the ventricle, the needle was withdrawn and the outer end of the
Intracath was attached to a port in the base of a hollow cap machined
from Delrin, which was then secured to the skull with cyanoacrylate
adhesive. [The use of this device to infuse ultra-small volumes into
the fetal ventricle is described more fully below and by Hirst et al.
(2000) .] The internal space of the cap and cannula assembly was filled
with sterile artificial CSF (aCSF) by means of inflow and outflow
catheters sealed into the wall of the cap. The fetus was then given a
subcutaneous injection (2 ml) of a mixture of procaine penicillin (200 mg/ml) and dihydrostreptomycin (250 mg/ml) (Depomycin; Intervet
Pty, Ltd., New South Wales, Australia). The uterus and membranes
were repaired, and all catheters and wires were exteriorized from the
abdomen through a 1 cm incision in the flank of the ewe. The abdominal
incisions were then repaired and the ewe was allowed to recover.
Experiments did not commence for at least 5 d after surgery.
Recordings. Tracheal pressure and carotid arterial pressures
were recorded after electronic subtraction of amniotic pressure. Instantaneous heart rate was computed on-line from the pulse rate. The
phasic changes of tracheal pressure were used as a measure of
spontaneous fetal breathing movements. EOG and ECoG activities were
amplified using wide-band EEG pre-amplifiers (model 7P5B; Grass
Instruments, West Warwick, RI) with frequency bandpass filters set at
1-15 Hz before being displayed directly on the polygraph. The EMG
signal from the nuchal muscles was amplified, bandpass-filtered, and
then integrated using a "leaky" integrator with the time constant set at 0.2 sec. All signals were recorded continuously for at least 24 hr before the experiments began, using a paper chart speed of 5 mm/min.
Experimental procedures. The internal volume of the
catheters and cap attached to the intraventricular cannula was first
filled with an aCSF suitable for fetal sheep (Bissonnette et al.,
1981 ). The two catheters were attached to glass syringes mounted onto a
double-barrel infusion pump (model 70134; B. Braun Melsungen AG,
Melsungen, Germany); fluid was simultaneously infused and withdrawn
through the catheters and cap. The greater internal diameter of these
catheters (0.86 mm) compared with that of the intraventricular cannula
(0.60 mm), and the use of this push/pull perfusion system, ensured that
the fluid passed through the cap and catheters and did not enter the
ventricle through the cannula. Sterility was maintained by attaching a
0.20 µm membrane filter (Minisart; Satorius AG, Gottingen, Germany)
to the inflow syringe. Injection of known volumes of fluid into the
ventricle was achieved by closing a stopcock on the outflow catheter
for a known period of time, causing the fluid, which continued to be
infused through the inflow catheter, to be forced through the cannula
into the ventricle. Before commencement of infusion, both catheters and the cap were filled with the treatment solution. Infusion into the
ventricle was done at a flow rate of 10 µl/min over 4 hr so that the
total volume delivered over this time was 2.4 ml.
SeCl4 and PGD2 were made up
in aCSF. The infusion rate was constant and used for all treatments;
the quantity of SeCl4 or
PGD2 delivered into the ventricle (picomoles per
minute) was varied by changing the concentration of each substance in
the infusate. At the end of each treatment the catheters and caps were
refilled with fresh aCSF, leaving ~10 µl of the treatment solution
in the dead-space of the ventricular cannula.
Polygraph records of breathing movements, blood pressure, heart rate,
ECoG, nuchal EMG, and EOG activities were obtained for at least 4 hr
before and for 12 hr after commencement of each treatment. Fetal
arterial blood samples (0.6 ml) were taken at hourly intervals for the
measurement of blood gases, and the pH was corrected for the expected
fetal body temperature of 38.5°C using an ABL5 (Radiometer,
Copenhagen, Denmark) blood-gas analyzer. In the first part of the
study, doses of SeCl4 or
PGD2 between 25 pmol/min and 1 nmol/min
were given to the fetuses to determine the effects on behavior. It was
shown that 500 pmol of either SeCl4 or
PGD2 produced maximal changes in fetal behavior,
and in the final study, administration of 500 pmol/min of
SeCl4 for 4 hr was then followed immediately by a
4 hr infusion of 500 pmol/min of PGD2 into the
ventricle. To ensure that baseline conditions were achieved after each
treatment, between 24 and 48 hr elapsed between treatments in each fetus.
Postmortem. Immediately before postmortem examination at
142 d gestation, the lateral ventricle was infused with 100 µl
of Indian Ink (Winsor & Newton, London, UK), to verify correct
insertion of the cannula into the lateral ventricle. The ewe was given
an overdose of sodium pentobarbitone (325 mg/ml, i.v.; Lethobarb; Virbac, New South Wales, Australia) and the fetus was then immediately removed and weighed. In all the animals used for the study the cannula
had passed through the cortex and the tip was observed to be in the
lateral ventricle with no evidence of bleeding or tissue necrosis in
the surrounding cortical tissue. Two fetuses in which the cannula had
not entered the ventricle were excluded from the study.
Analysis of polygraph records. The entire 16 hr record of
each experiment was analyzed on a minute-to-minute basis. For each minute, the ECoG, EMG, EOG, and fetal breathing movements were coded
and then used to determine which behavioral state was present. NREM
sleep was defined as high-amplitude ECoG activity (>100 µV) occurring simultaneously with sustained or tonic nuchal muscle EMG
activity and the absence of EOG activity and breathing movements. REM
sleep was considered to be present when the ECoG amplitude was of a low
amplitude (<100 µV) in the presence of EOG activity and breathing
movements and with no tonic nuchal EMG activity. As originally defined
(Szeto and Hinman, 1985 ) and used previously (Crossley et al., 1997 ;
Nicol et al., 1998 , 2001 ), arousal was identified as periods of nuchal
EMG, EOG, and breathing movement activities in the presence of
low-amplitude ECoG. Arterial pressure and heart rate were measured from
the record at 10 min intervals and then averaged over 1 or 4 hr epochs.
Statistical analysis
All data are presented as means ± SEM. All data were
checked for homogeneity of variance using Levene's test of equality of error variances. If the data were not normally distributed, they were
transformed by square root or natural log. Data were analyzed by
repeated-measures ANOVA in which the between-subject factor was
dose (0, 25, 100, 500, and 1000 pmol of SeCl4 or
PGD2) and the repeated variable (within-subject
factor) was time. When an interaction between factors was demonstrated,
paired comparisons were made using the least significant difference
test, and p < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
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RESULTS |
Prostaglandin D synthase ( -trace protein) in CSF
Immunoreactive -trace was detected in fetal CSF and adult human
CSF (Fig. 1A) at an apparent molecular mass of
27 kDa, similar to that reported by
others for this protein (Harrington et al., 1993 ). -Trace protein
was present in CSF taken from all fetuses at 125 and 135 d
gestation but not in the samples from the three fetuses at 90 d
gestation (Fig. 1B,C). There was no difference in
expression of -trace protein between fetuses at 125 and 135 d
gestation. -Trace protein was not detected in the fetal choroid plexus, liver, or skeletal muscle at any gestational age.

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Figure 1.
A, Western blot showing
immunoreactive -trace protein in adult human and fetal ovine CSF and
its absence from fetal ovine choroid plexus (CP)
hypothalamus, liver and muscle, and adult rat cortex. The molecular
mass marker (27 kDa) shown by the arrow on the
left was obtained from protein standards run on the same
gel (data not shown). B, Western blot of
immunoreactive -trace protein in fetal ovine CSF at 90, 125, and
135 d gestation (n = 3 for each age).
-Trace protein was undetectable at 90 d gestation. The position
of the 27 kDa molecular mass marker is shown by the arrow on
the left. C, Densitometric
analysis of -trace protein expression is shown in B.
Results shown are means ± SEM; the asterisk
indicates a significant difference between the values at 90 d
compared with those at 125 and 135 d gestation
(p < 0.05).
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Intraventricular infusions of SeCl4 and
prostaglandin D2
These experiments were performed in chronically catheterized and
unanesthetized fetuses at 130-140 d gestation, in utero. In
recordings made over 4 hr before infusion of either
SeCl4 or PGD2, all fetuses
showed normal behavioral states, in which clearly differentiated
episodes of high- and low-voltage ECoG activities were present (Fig.
2A). The mean duration
of the individual low- and high-voltage ECoG episodes was 7.7 ± 0.9 and 4.8 ± 0.8 min, respectively, and the average incidences
for the control period were 33.4 ± 0.9 and 26.6 ± 0.9 min/hr. Of this, 25.1 ± 0.9 min/hr was occupied by the REM-like
state (low-amplitude ECoG plus EOG activity and breathing movements)
and 19.6 ± 1.0 min was occupied by the NREM-like state
(high-amplitude ECoG plus nuchal EMG activity). Intermittent periods of
activity, defined as arousal because of the presence of low-voltage
ECoG activity together with nuchal EMG and EOG activities, occurred
from time to time at the transition between the two sleep states (Fig.
2A). The mean duration of the individual arousal-like
episodes was 1.5 ± 0.2 min; the mean incidence of arousal
activity was 3.3 ± 0.3 min/hr. Arousal-like episodes were usually
associated with a transient elevation of both blood pressure and heart
rate (data not shown). Because of either spurious artifact or record
loss, ~6 min/hr could not be classified as REM, NREM, or arousal.

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Figure 2.
A, Polygraph recording during the
pretreatment control period trace from a fetal sheep at 135 d
gestation showing ECoG, EOG, integrated nuchal electromyogram
(EMGint) and fetal breathing movement
(FBM) activities. REM sleep (black
bar) was defined by the presence of FBM and EOG activity during
low-amplitude ECoG activity. NREM sleep (open bar) was
defined by the presence of varying but nearly continuous activity in
the nuchal muscle during high-amplitude ECoG activity. Arousal
(shaded bar) was identified by the presence of breathing
movements, nuchal EMG, and EOG activities simultaneously with
low-amplitude ECoG activity. B, Polygraph recording
obtained from the same fetus shown in A >9 hr after the
commencement of SeCl4 at 500 pmol/min over 4 hr. Note the
increase in the total amount of nuchal EMG and EOG activities and the
increased incidence of the period defined as arousal (shaded
bars). Periods that did not conform exactly to REM, NREM, or
arousal behaviors are shown by the hatched bars at the
beginning and end of the first NREM episode.
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Infusion of SeCl4 into the lateral ventricle of
the fetus increased the number and overall incidence of arousal-like
episodes (Fig. 2B). This effect was evident when a
dose of 500 pmol/min was infused for 4 hr, resulting in a significant
increase in arousal activity at 9, 10, 11, and 12 hr after starting the
infusion (Fig. 3), compared with both the
pretreatment values and the equivalent times during treatment with
aCSF. Infusion of SeCl4 at 25 pmol/min briefly
increased arousal at 8-9 hr after the start of treatment but did not
produce sustained effects, whereas infusions of either 100 or 500 pmol/min increased the arousal incidence from 3.8 ± 1 min/hr to
6.6 ± 0.5 and 7.0 ± 0.3 min/hr, respectively (Fig. 4). aCSF infused at 10 µl/min for 4 hr
did not significantly alter any of the indexes of fetal behavior.
Infusion of SeCl4 at 1 nmol/min over 4 hr did not
increase arousal activity (Fig. 4), but doses of 5 and 10 nmol/min
produced seizure-like activity (n = 4; data not shown).
At the doses below 1 nmol/min, SeCl4 had no
effect on the overall incidences of low- and high-voltage ECoG
activities. When arousal-like activity was increased, this was
attributable primarily to an increase in the incidence of nuchal muscle
EMG activity that occurred when low-voltage ECoG activity was present (Fig. 5). At doses of 25 and 100 pmol/min, SeCl4 also increased the incidences of
EOG activity and breathing movements (Fig.
6).

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Figure 3.
Effects of infusing aCSF (n = 5) or SeCl4 at 500 pmol/min (n = 4) on
the hourly incidence (minutes per hour) of arousal-like activity.
Infusions were administered into the left ventricle of fetuses at
130-140 d gestation at 10 µl/min for 4 hr (solid
bar). Administration of SeCl4 caused a significant
increase (p < 0.05, as shown by
asterisks) in the incidence of arousal compared with
equivalent times for infusion of aCSF. Data shown are means ± SEM.
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Figure 4.
Effect of infusing SeCl4 at 25, 100, 500, or 1000 pmol/min on the incidence (minutes per hour) of
arousal behavior in fetal sheep. Zero dose was aCSF infused at 10 µl/min for 4 hr. Data shown are means ± SEM.
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Figure 5.
Effects of infusing aCSF (n = 5) or SeCl4 at 500 pmol/min (n = 4) on
the hourly incidence of nuchal EMG activity in the presence of
low-amplitude ECoG. Infusions were administered into the left cerebral
ventricle of fetuses at 130-140 d gestation for 4 hr (solid
bar). Administration of SeCl4 caused a significant
increase (p < 0.05, as shown by
asterisks) in the incidence of nuchal EMG activity in
the presence of low-voltage activity compared with equivalent times for
infusion of aCSF. Data shown are means ± SEM.
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Figure 6.
Effects of infusing SeCl4 for 4 hr
into the left cerebral ventricle of fetuses at 130-140 d gestation on
the hourly incidence of EOG and breathing movements. Values were
calculated by accumulating all activity over the 4 hr epochs and then
determining the mean incidence per hour. Administration of
SeCl4 at 25 (n = 4) and 100 (n = 4) pmol/min caused a significant increase
(p < 0.05, as shown by
asterisks) in the incidence of nuchal EMG activity.
Infusion of aCSF or the other doses of SeCl4 had no effects
on these parameters. Data shown are means ± SEM.
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The intraventricular infusion of PGD2 alone had
no significant effect on the incidences of low- and high-voltage ECoG
activities, but the incidence of arousal was significantly decreased at
doses of 500 and 1000 pmol/min. As shown in Figure
7, when PGD2 was infused at 500 pmol/min the incidence of arousal-like behavior decreased from 3.8 ± 0.5 min/hr for the 4 hr control period to 0.7 min/hr at 6 hr after the start of the infusion. This decrease in
activity began during the 4 hr infusion period, continued for 3 hr
after the end of the infusion, and was attributable to decreased incidences of nuchal EMG activity and breathing movements during low-voltage ECoG (data not shown).

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Figure 7.
Effects of infusing aCSF (n = 5) or PGD2 at 500 pmol/min (n = 6) on
the hourly incidence (minutes per hour) of arousal. Infusions were
administered into the left ventricle of fetuses at 130-140 d gestation
at 10 µl/min for 4 hr (solid bar). PGD2
caused a significant decrease in the incidence of arousal
(p < 0.05, as shown by
asterisks) compared with both the control period within
the treatment group and with equivalent times for infusion of aCSF.
Data shown are means ± SEM.
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Four fetuses were then treated with SeCl4 at 500 pmol/min for 4 hr, followed immediately by an intraventricular infusion
of PGD2 at 500 pmol/min for 4 hr. As described
above, at 500 pmol/min SeCl4 induced a
significant increase in the incidence of arousal between 8 and 12 hr
after starting the infusion attributable to the significant increase in
nuchal EMG activity (Fig. 8). This increase in arousal was abolished by an infusion of
PGD2 at 500 pmol/min administered during the
period 5-8 hr after the SeCl4 treatment was
started. The decline in the incidence of arousal was attributable to a
reduction in the incidence of nuchal EMG activity during the epochs of
low-amplitude ECoG activity (Fig. 8). The combined infusion of
SeCl4 and PGD2 did not
significantly alter the incidences of low- and high-amplitude ECoG
activities, or when analyzed separately, the overall incidences of EOG
activity or breathing movements.

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Figure 8.
Effects of infusing SeCl4 alone at 500 pmol/min (solid bars) or the same dose of
SeCl4 followed by a 4 hr infusion of PGD2 at
500 pmol/min (shaded bars). The increased incidences of
arousal and nuchal muscle EMG activities produced by the
SeCl4 treatments were abolished by the infusion of
PGD2. Data shown are means ± SEM
(n = 4 fetuses) and demonstrate the incidence
(minute per hour) of activity for consecutive 4 hr epochs.
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Infusion of aCSF over 4 hr had no significant effect on the
arousal-like behavior (Figs. 3 and 7) or nuchal muscle EMG activity exhibited by the fetuses (Fig. 5). Also, all separate and combined treatments with SeCl4 and
PGD2 did not have any significant effects on the
arterial blood gases, pH, mean arterial
pressure or heart rate (Tables 1 and 2).
All of these parameters were in the normal range for fetal sheep at
130-140 d gestation.
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Table 1.
Fetal arterial blood gases, pH, oxygen saturation, and
hemoglobin concentration before (control) and at the end (+4 hr) of
intracerebroventricular infusion of aCSF or SeCl4 (500 pmol/min), or at +8 hr after SeCl4 (500 pmol/min) and then
PGD2 (500 pmol/min)
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Table 2.
Fetal arterial blood pressure and heart rate before
(control) and at the end (+4 hr) of intracerebroventricular infusion of
aCSF or SeCl4 (500 pmol/min), or at +8 hr after
SeCl4 (500 pmol/min) and then PGD2 (500 pmol/min)
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DISCUSSION |
We have shown that PGDS/ -trace protein was undetectable in the
CSF of fetal sheep at 90 d gestation but was clearly present by
125 d gestation and thereafter. The appearance of this particular protein in CSF in late gestation is counter to the general trend for
proteins to decrease in fetal CSF (Dziegielewska et al., 1980 ), although the CSF protein concentration at 125 d gestation (50 mg/ml) is still approximately twice that in adult sheep. The appearance of PGDS/ -trace protein in late gestation, at approximately the time
that definite sleep states emerge, may be related to the onset of
secretion of the protein from the choroid plexus and leptomeninges
(Urade et al., 1995 ; Blodorn et al., 1996 ). The apparent absence of the
protein from the fetal choroid plexus at any stage of development may
be related to the low abundance of the protein in this tissue, because
of its immediate secretion into CSF. Alternatively, the tertiary
structure of the protein within the choroidal epithelial cells may
differ from the secreted form. Similar results have been found in the
human neonate, in which an antibody raised against the peptide sequence
of human CSF -trace did not recognize the protein in extracts of
neonatal choroid plexus (Harrington et al., 1993 ).
An important finding of this study was that intraventricular infusion
of SeCl4 caused a dose-dependent increase in the
incidence of fetal CNS activities, similar to that which defines
arousal in the adult animal. This increase in fetal arousal was
abolished by the subsequent administration of
PGD2 into the lateral ventricle. Infusion of aCSF
at the same rate (10 µl/min) over 4 hr did not disrupt the ECoG, EOG,
or nuchal muscle EMG activities, nor did it alter the patterns of
activities from which the behavioral states of NREM and REM sleep and
arousal are deduced. The production rate of CSF in late-gestation fetal
sheep has been estimated to be 21.4 µl/min (Fossan et al., 1985 ) at
~125 d gestation, and the total CSF volume is likely to be turned
over four to five times per day, as for most adult mammals (Davson et
al., 1987 ). Thus, it is likely that the SeCl4
would have been distributed throughout the CSF volume by the end of the
4 hr infusion period. The delayed onset of the increase in arousal-like
behavior is thus consistent with the inhibition of an enzyme system and
the subsequent slow decline of PGD2 content in
the brain and CSF. When PGD2 was administered,
the suppression of arousal began during the time of the infusion,
suggesting that it had access to a site(s) that influences sleep and
arousal activity in the brain. This is consistent with the lipophilic
nature of PGD2, which may enter the brain and
reach the sites of action more rapidly compared with
SeCl4. For PGD2, these
sites are likely to be on the ventral surface of the rostral forebrain
adjacent to the preoptic anterior hypothalamus (Matsumura et al., 1994 ;
Scammell et al., 1998 ; Mizoguchi et al., 2001 ). The absence of any
significant effects of the infusions on arterial pressure, heart rate,
or blood gases also suggests that these treatments did not have
significant nonspecific effects on brain functions.
The increase in the incidence of arousal behavior elicited by
SeCl4 occurred because of an increase in the both
the total amount of nuchal muscle EMG activity and the amount of nuchal EMG, EOG, and breathing activities present during the low-amplitude ECoG state. At 100 pmol/min, SeCl4 did not alter
the total amount of nuchal EMG activity present, but there was a
redistribution of the amount of nuchal muscle activity, with a greater
incidence occurring during low-amplitude ECoG, when normally there is
little sustained or tonic activity in this muscle group. At 500 pmol/min, SeCl4 increased the total amount of EMG
activity present in addition to an increase during low-amplitude ECoG activity.
The increase in arousal after SeCl4 treatment
implicates PGD2 in the tonic regulation of sleep
in the fetal sheep. The leptomeninges and choroid plexus contain
abundant PGDS, but the PGD receptor is highly expressed in arachnoid
trabecular cells in the vicinity of the basal forebrain/anterior
preoptic region (Mizoguchi et al., 2001 ). PGD2
appears to induce sleep by paracrine stimulation of adenosine release
from these meningeal cells, which by exciting the adjacent sleep-active
neurons in the VLPO leads in turn to GABAergic inhibition of the
wake-promoting, histaminergic neurons in the tuberomammillary region of
the posterior hypothalamus (for review, see Hayaishi, 2001 ). Blockade
of adenosine type 2A2 receptors in fetal sheep
leads to increased high-voltage ECoG activity and NREM-like sleep in
fetal sheep (Koos et al., 2001 ). In addition, we have shown that
neurosteroid modulation of GABAA receptor
activity leads to alterations of the fetal sleep states and
arousal-like behavior (Crossley et al., 1997 ; Nicol et al., 1998 ,
2001 ). Thus, the neurotransmitters and neuromodulators of the putative
hypothalamic sleep/wake system appear to have developed in the sheep
brain by late gestation.
Another reason for the effect of SeCl4 on fetal
behavior might be that reduction of PGDS activity permitted increased
production of PGE2 from the common arachidonate
precursor PGH2. In adult rats it has been
proposed that PGE2 acts directly on posterior hypothalamic neurons to induce wakefulness (Matsumura et al., 1988 ).
However, it should be noted that systemic infusions of PGE2 or the PG synthase inhibitors indomethacin
or meclofenamate do not alter sleep states or arousal in fetal sheep
(Kitterman, 1987 ). It is possible that changes in the ratio of
PGD2 and PGE2 concentrations in the fetal brain determine the propensity for sleep
and wakefulness.
Whether the increases in nuchal EMG, EOG, and breathing activities
during low-amplitude ECoG represent true arousal in the fetus must also
be considered. Consistent with previous studies, transient increases in
fetal blood pressure and heart rate have been observed during episodes
identified as arousal (Szeto, 1992 ), and similar cardiovascular and
autonomic changes occur in the newborn infant on arousal from sleep
(Read et al., 1998 ). In a recent study we showed that evoked
somatosensory responses were increased in amplitude after treating
fetal sheep with the 5 -reductase inhibitor finasteride, a treatment
that also increased the incidence of fetal arousal (Nicol et al.,
2001 ). These observations are consistent with the episodes identified
as fetal arousal as also being periods during which there is increased
cortical excitability. Nevertheless, it is also of interest that the
arousal-like episodes are brief, even after intracerebroventricular
infusion of SeCl4, suggesting that powerful
sleep-promoting mechanisms remain active in the fetal sheep until the
time of birth. The results of this study suggest that a
PGD2 mechanism contributes to the suppression of
wakefulness in the fetus, but it is not the sole mechanism that
maintains the sleep that accounts for most of the behavioral state in
fetal life.
Other proposed functions of PGDS/ -trace protein may be important. It
has been identified as a member of the lipocalin superfamily in the
basis of conserved tertiary structure (Nagata et al., 1991 ), making it
apparent that this protein may be involved in the transmembrane transport of small lipophilic molecules. In adults, -trace protein is constitutively expressed at other blood-tissue boundaries, including the retina (Beuckmann et al., 1996 ; Gerashchenko et al.,
1998 ) and testis (Tokugawa et al., 1998 ). Thus, this lipocalin-like protein may be involved in the transport of essential substrates into
tissues that possess a microvasculature with barrier properties.
In summary, we have shown that inhibition of PGDS by
SeCl4 markedly increases the incidence of
arousal-like behavior in late-gestation fetal sheep. This arousal-like
activity was suppressed by PGD2; PGD2 replacement also prevented the actions of
SeCl4. These findings suggest that the activity
of PGDS and production of PGD2 in the fetal brain
has a role in suppressing wakefulness and maintaining sleep in
utero.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 4, 2001; revised March 12, 2002; accepted March 29, 2002.
This work was supported by grants from the National Health and Medical
Research Council of Australia to D.W.W. and J.J.H. B.L. was an
Australian Postgraduate Award scholar. We thank Alex Satragno for help
with the animal surgery.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. David Walker, Department of
Physiology, Monash University, Wellington Road, Clayton, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia, 3800. E-mail: david.walker{at}med.monash.edu.au.
 |
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