4.7 Article

The brain H3-receptor as a novel therapeutic target for vigilance and sleep-wake disorders

期刊

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
卷 73, 期 8, 页码 1157-1171

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2007.01.002

关键词

sleep-wake cycle; histamine; H-3-receptor; cortical EEG; arousal; vigilance; sleep-wake disorders; narcolepsy; somnolence; modafinil; psychostimulant; knockout mice

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Brain histaminergic neurons play a prominent role in arousal and maintenance of wakefulness (W). H-3-receptors control the activity of histaminergic neurons through presynaptic autoinhibition. The role of H-3-receptor antagonists/inverse agonists (H3R-antagonists) in the potential therapy of vigilance deficiency and sleep-wake disorders were studied by assessing their effects on the mouse cortical EEG and sleep-wake cycle in comparison to modafinil and classical psychostimulants. The H3R-antagonists, thioperamide and ciproxifan increased W and cortical EEG fast rhythms and, like modafinil, but unlike amphetamine and caffeine, their waking effects were not accompanied by sleep rebound. Conversely, imetit (H3R-agonist) enhanced slow wave sleep and dose-dependently attenuated ciproxifan-induced W, indicating that the effects of both ligands involve H-3-receptor mechanisms. Additional studies using knockout (KO) mice confirmed the essential role of H-3-receptors and histamine-mediated transmission in the wake properties of H3R- antagonists. Thus ciproxifan produced no increase in W in either histidine-decarboxylase (HDC, histamine-synthesizing enzyme) or H-1- or H-3-receptor KO-mice whereas its waking effects persisted in H-2-receptor KO-mice. These data validate the hypothesis that H3R-antagonists, through disinhibition of H-3-autoreceptors, enhancing synaptic histamine that in turn activates postsynaptic HI-receptors promoting W. Interestingly amphetamine and modafinil, despite their potent arousal effects, appear unlikely to depend on histaminergic mechanism as their effects still occurred in HDC KO-mice. The present study thus distinguishes two classes of wake-improving agents: the first acting through non-histaminergic mechanisms and the second acting via histamine and supports brain H-3-receptors as potentially novel therapeutic targets for vigilance and sleep-wake disorders. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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