4.7 Article

Chronic sleep fragmentation shares similar pathogenesis with neurodegenerative diseases: Endosome-autophagosome-lysosome pathway dysfunction and microglia-mediated neuroinflammation

Journal

CNS NEUROSCIENCE & THERAPEUTICS
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 215-227

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cns.13218

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; amyloid-beta; autophagy; lysosome; microglia; sleep fragmentation

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Aims Insufficient sleep has been found to result in varying degrees of cognitive impairment and emotional changes. Sleep was reported probably responsible for cleaning metabolic wastes in brain by increasing extracellular bulk flow. Herein, we propose that chronic sleep insufficiency in young adult wild-type mice is also linked with dysfunction of intracellular protein degradation pathways and microglia-mediated neuroinflammation, which are potentially important mechanisms in the initiation of neurodegeneration. Methods We applied the chronic sleep fragmentation (CSF) model to induce chronic sleep insufficiency in wild-type mice. After 2 months of CSF, cognitive function, amyloid-beta accumulation, dysfunction of endosome-autophagosome-lysosome pathway, and microglia activation were evaluated. Results Following CSF, impairment of spatial learning and memory, and aggravated anxiety-like behavior in mice were identified by behavioral experiments. Increased intracellular amyloid-beta accumulation was observed in cortex and hippocampus. Mechanistically, CSF could significantly enhance the expression of Rab5 (early endosome marker), Rab7 (late endosome marker), as well as LC3B (autophagosome marker), and autophagy-positive regulatory factors in brain detected by immunofluorescent staining and Western blot. In addition, activation of microglia was evident by enhanced CD68, CD16/32, and CD206 levels after CSF treatment. Conclusions Chronic sleep fragmentation could initiate pathogenetic processes similar to the early stage of neurodegeneration, including dysfunction of endosome-autophagosome-lysosome pathway and microglia-mediated neuroinflammation. Our findings further strengthen the link between chronic sleep insufficiency and the initiation of neurodegeneration even if lack of genetic predisposition.

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