4.5 Article

Shank3 influences mammalian sleep development

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 100, Issue 12, Pages 2174-2186

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.25119

Keywords

autism spectrum disorder; development; EEG; mouse model; REM; Shank3; sleep; sleep latency

Categories

Funding

  1. Justice Equity Diversity and Inclusion (JEDI) award from the Life Science Editors foundation [K01NS104172]
  2. NIH/NINDS

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This study used an animal model to investigate the developmental trajectory of sleep abnormalities in an autism mouse model. The results showed that these mice sleep less overall throughout their lifespan, have increased REM sleep early in life, and abnormal responses to sleep pressure. Additionally, the mutant mice were unable to reduce sleep latency after prolonged waking and maintained the same response to sleep loss regardless of age.
Sleep problems are prevalent in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), can be observed before diagnosis, and are associated with increased restricted and repetitive behaviors. Therefore, sleep abnormalities may be a core feature of the disorder, but the developmental trajectory remains unknown. Animal models provide a unique opportunity to understand sleep ontogenesis in ASD. Previously we showed that adult mice with a truncation in the high-confidence ASD gene Shank3 (Shank3( increment C)) recapitulate the clinical sleep phenotype. In this study we used longitudinal electro-encephalographic (EEG) recordings to define, for the first time, changes in sleep from weaning to young adulthood in an ASD mouse model. We show that Shank3( increment C) male mice sleep less overall throughout their lifespan, have increased rapid eye movement (REM) sleep early in life despite significantly reduced non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, and have abnormal responses to increased sleep pressure that emerge during a specific developmental period. We demonstrate that the ability to fall asleep quickly in response to sleep loss develops normally between 24 and 30 days in mice. However, mutants are unable to reduce sleep latency after periods of prolonged waking and maintain the same response to sleep loss regardless of age. This phenomenon seems independent of homeostatic NREM sleep slow-wave dynamics. Overall, our study recapitulates both preclinical models and clinical studies showing that reduced sleep is consistently associated with ASD and suggests that problems falling asleep may reflect abnormal development of sleep and arousal mechanisms.

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