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Publication : Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptors Chrm1 and Chrm3 Are Essential for REM Sleep.

First Author  Niwa Y Year  2018
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  24
Issue  9 Pages  2231-2247.e7
PubMed ID  30157420 Mgi Jnum  J:271177
Mgi Id  MGI:6278856 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2018.07.082
Citation  Niwa Y, et al. (2018) Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptors Chrm1 and Chrm3 Are Essential for REM Sleep. Cell Rep 24(9):2231-2247.e7
abstractText  Sleep regulation involves interdependent signaling among specialized neurons in distributed brain regions. Although acetylcholine promotes wakefulness and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, it is unclear whether the cholinergic pathway is essential (i.e., absolutely required) for REM sleep because of redundancy from neural circuits to molecules. First, we demonstrate that synaptic inhibition of TrkA+ cholinergic neurons causes a severe short-sleep phenotype and that sleep reduction is mostly attributable to a shortened sleep duration in the dark phase. Subsequent comprehensive knockout of acetylcholine receptor genes by the triple-target CRISPR method reveals that a similar short-sleep phenotype appears in the knockout of two Gq-type acetylcholine receptors Chrm1 and Chrm3. Strikingly, Chrm1 and Chrm3 double knockout chronically diminishes REM sleep to an almost undetectable level. These results suggest that muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, Chrm1 and Chrm3, are essential for REM sleep.
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