A physiologically based model of orexinergic stabilization of sleep and wake
- PMID: 24651580
- PMCID: PMC3961294
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0091982
A physiologically based model of orexinergic stabilization of sleep and wake
Abstract
The orexinergic neurons of the lateral hypothalamus (Orx) are essential for regulating sleep-wake dynamics, and their loss causes narcolepsy, a disorder characterized by severe instability of sleep and wake states. However, the mechanisms through which Orx stabilize sleep and wake are not well understood. In this work, an explanation of the stabilizing effects of Orx is presented using a quantitative model of important physiological connections between Orx and the sleep-wake switch. In addition to Orx and the sleep-wake switch, which is composed of mutually inhibitory wake-active monoaminergic neurons in brainstem and hypothalamus (MA) and the sleep-active ventrolateral preoptic neurons of the hypothalamus (VLPO), the model also includes the circadian and homeostatic sleep drives. It is shown that Orx stabilizes prolonged waking episodes via its excitatory input to MA and by relaying a circadian input to MA, thus sustaining MA firing activity during the circadian day. During sleep, both Orx and MA are inhibited by the VLPO, and the subsequent reduction in Orx input to the MA indirectly stabilizes sustained sleep episodes. Simulating a loss of Orx, the model produces dynamics resembling narcolepsy, including frequent transitions between states, reduced waking arousal levels, and a normal daily amount of total sleep. The model predicts a change in sleep timing with differences in orexin levels, with higher orexin levels delaying the normal sleep episode, suggesting that individual differences in Orx signaling may contribute to chronotype. Dynamics resembling sleep inertia also emerge from the model as a gradual sleep-to-wake transition on a timescale that varies with that of Orx dynamics. The quantitative, physiologically based model developed in this work thus provides a new explanation of how Orx stabilizes prolonged episodes of sleep and wake, and makes a range of experimentally testable predictions, including a role for Orx in chronotype and sleep inertia.
Conflict of interest statement
Figures
) and homeostatic (
) drives. Arrows indicate interactions between the populations, as well as the pathways of the circadian and homeostatic drives, and represent either excitatory (
) or inhibitory (
) interactions. A All modeled interactions are shown, including the mutual inhibition between VLPO and MA , inhibition of Orx by VLPO , and excitatory input from Orx to MA . The circadian drive,
, which originates in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), is afferent to both VLPO (inhibition) and Orx (excitation) , while the homeostatic sleep drive,
, which increases during wake and decreases during sleep, disinhibits VLPO . Example two day time traces for normal sleep-wake behavior are annotated below the
and
drives. B The model can be mathematically reduced to the core dynamics of mutual inhibition between the sleep-active VLPO and wake-active MA groups. In this representation, net drives,
and
, to VLPO and MA, respectively, control the arousal state dynamics. This reduced representation is used throughout this work to visualize and understand the model dynamics.
–
space are: (i) wake: at low
and high
a stable wake state exists, (ii) sleep: at high
and low
a stable sleep state exists, and (iii) bistable (shaded): at intermediate
and
wake and sleep states are simultaneously stable and transient noise can produce lasting changes of state. Simulated 5-h time series and
–
plots for fixed points in this space are shown in the remaining figures. Time series are plotted for average firing rates of the VLPO,
(red), and the MA,
(blue). In the
–
plots, we include
nullclines (solid lines),
nullclines (dashed lines), stable equilibriums (solid circles), saddle points (open circles), and the separatrix (dotted black line); see File S1 for definitions and numerical details. B
is high and
is low; a single stable wake state exists. C
is high and
is low; a single stable sleep state exists. D In the bistable region at high
and
, thresholds for transitions between wake and sleep are high and hence state transitions are extremely improbable: the system remains either awake or asleep depending on its initial state (on timescales relevant to the current dynamics). E In the bistable region nearer the sleep bifurcation boundary, transitions from wake to sleep are more probable than transitions from sleep to wake. F In the bistable region at low
and
, thresholds for transitions between sleep and wake are low and simulated time series are highly fragmented.
and
, and is labeled ‘no Orx’. The trajectory for the original Phillips-Robinson model occurs at fixed
mV and is shown semi-transparent for comparison (note that the wake trajectory of the Phillips-Robinson model extends beyond the limits of the figure to
mV). When Orx is removed from the model, the system oscillates at low
and
, where thresholds for transitions between wake and sleep are low. However, with Orx in the model, the wake and sleep states are stabilized: Orx is active during wake, increasing
, and Orx is suppressed during sleep, decreasing
, thereby moving the system away from the bistable region where state transitions can occur and promoting consolidated wake and sleep episodes. Circadian input to Orx modulates waking arousal levels:
is lower in the early morning and increases to a maximum at the circadian maximum, then decreases through the afternoon and evening. Two-day time series for noise-free model dynamics (including Orx) are also plotted as: B Firing rates
(black),
(blue), and
(green, dashed), C Net drives to the VLPO,
[black, Eq. (7)], and the MA,
[gray, Eq. (8)], and D Drives
[black, Eq. (5)] and
[gray, Eq. (6)]. Approximate clock times for a typical sleep-wake schedule are given as a guide, and sleep periods are shaded.
mV s) for
(blue),
(green), and
(orange), and B Fragmented dynamics with Orx removed from the model (i.e.,
). Periods of sleep, with
(black), and wake, with
(white), are shown in the strip above the main plot. When
is reduced, the system moves from a regime in which Orx stabilizes extended wake and sleep bouts, to a regime characterized by low waking arousal levels and increased fragmentation due to a lowering of the threshold for state transitions.
across two-day model simulations. B The circadian drive,
, versus time. Various statistics taken from the model output are plotted as a function of
as the mean (solid)
standard deviation (dotted) measured across a 25 day model simulation (following a 3 day equilibration period), for C Total sleep duration per day, D Number of state transitions per day, E Duration of sleep bouts, F
during wake (blue) and
during sleep (black), and G Homeostatic sleep drive,
.
(blue), VLPO,
(black), and Orx,
(green), are plotted for the sleep-to-wake (A–C) and wake-to-sleep (D–F) transitions for
s (A, B),
min (B, E), and
min (C, F), as a function of time relative to the change of state. The plots were produced by averaging 50 model runs relative to the time of the state transition; one standard deviation about the mean is shown dotted. The approximate steady state firing rate for
is annotated as a dashed purple line in A–C, and for
in D–F. The parameter
selectively tunes the duration of the sleep-to-wake transition but has minimal effect on the wake-to-sleep transition. This gradual wake transition can be linked to the clinical phenomenon of sleep inertia.References
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