Journal
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 95, Issue 4, Pages 562-569Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2008.08.001
Keywords
Sleep deprivation; Estradiol; Sex differences; c-Fos; Ovariectomy
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Funding
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP-67085]
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Women recover from sleep deprivation more efficiently than men, but the mechanism for this difference is unknown. Effects of estrogen on sleep suggest that it could play a role, but the brain targets on which estrogen may act to have this effect have not been identified. Sleep deprivation increases levels of the immediate-early gene protein c-Fos in selected brain regions, but it is unknown whether estrogen modulates this response. We investigated the influence of different levels of exogenous estradiol on the c-Fos response to sleep deprivation in ovariectomized female rats. Female rats were treated with low or high levels of estradiol (mimicking diestrous and proestrous levels. respectively) delivered via subcutaneous silastic tubes. Control ovariectomized females and sham-operated males were implanted with tubes filled with cholesterol. One week after surgery, half of the rats underwent a 3 h period of sleep deprivation during the light phase in a motorized Wahmann activity wheel that rotated constantly at a slow speed. while half were confined to fixed wheels. Immediately after sleep deprivation. animals were killed and their brains processed to detect c-Fos using immunohistochernistry. Sleep deprivation increased the number of c-Fos positive cells in a number of brain areas. including the caudate putamen, medial preoptic area, perifornical hypothalamus, and anterior paraventricular thalamic nucleus. Other areas, including the suprachiasmatic nucleus, posterior paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, posterior paraventricular thalamic nucleus, arcuate nucleus, and central amygdala, did not respond to 3 h sleep deprivation with a significant increase in c-Fos levels. Levels of c-Fos induced in the selected brain regions by sleep deprivation were not modulated by estrogen levels. nor by sex. (c) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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