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[Preprint]. 2024 Apr 12:2023.11.06.565853.
doi: 10.1101/2023.11.06.565853.

Developing forebrain synapses are uniquely vulnerable to sleep loss

Developing forebrain synapses are uniquely vulnerable to sleep loss

Sean M Gay et al. bioRxiv. .

Update in

  • Developing forebrain synapses are uniquely vulnerable to sleep loss.
    Gay SM, Chartampila E, Lord JS, Grizzard S, Maisashvili T, Ye M, Barker NK, Mordant AL, Mills CA, Herring LE, Diering GH. Gay SM, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Oct 29;121(44):e2407533121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2407533121. Epub 2024 Oct 23. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024. PMID: 39441640 Free PMC article.

Abstract

Sleep is an essential behavior that supports lifelong brain health and cognition. Neuronal synapses are a major target for restorative sleep function and a locus of dysfunction in response to sleep deprivation (SD). Synapse density is highly dynamic during development, becoming stabilized with maturation to adulthood, suggesting sleep exerts distinct synaptic functions between development and adulthood. Importantly, problems with sleep are common in neurodevelopmental disorders including autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Moreover, early life sleep disruption in animal models causes long lasting changes in adult behavior. Different plasticity engaged during sleep necessarily implies that developing and adult synapses will show differential vulnerability to SD. To investigate distinct sleep functions and mechanisms of vulnerability to SD across development, we systematically examined the behavioral and molecular responses to acute SD between juvenile (P21-28), adolescent (P42-49) and adult (P70-100) mice of both sexes. Compared to adults, juveniles lack robust adaptations to SD, precipitating cognitive deficits in the novel object recognition test. Subcellular fractionation, combined with proteome and phosphoproteome analysis revealed the developing synapse is profoundly vulnerable to SD, whereas adults exhibit comparative resilience. SD in juveniles, and not older mice, aberrantly drives induction of synapse potentiation, synaptogenesis, and expression of peri-neuronal nets. Our analysis further reveals the developing synapse as a convergent node between vulnerability to SD and ASD genetic risk. Together, our systematic analysis supports a distinct developmental function of sleep and reveals how sleep disruption impacts key aspects of brain development, providing mechanistic insights for ASD susceptibility.

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