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Publication : Interleukin 1 receptor contributes to methamphetamine- and sleep deprivation-induced hypersomnolence.

First Author  Schmidt MA Year  2012
Journal  Neurosci Lett Volume  513
Issue  2 Pages  209-13
PubMed ID  22387068 Mgi Jnum  J:182682
Mgi Id  MGI:5316327 Doi  10.1016/j.neulet.2012.02.040
Citation  Schmidt MA, et al. (2012) Interleukin 1 receptor contributes to methamphetamine- and sleep deprivation-induced hypersomnolence. Neurosci Lett 513(2):209-13
abstractText  Methamphetamine-induced wakefulness is dependent on monoamine transporter blockade. Subsequent to methamphetamine-induced wakefulness, the amount of time spent asleep and the depth of sleep are increased relative to baseline sleep. The mechanisms that drive methamphetamine-induced hypersomnolence are not fully understood. We recently observed that methamphetamine exposure elevates the expression of the sleep-promoting cytokine, interleukin-1beta in CD11b-positive monocytes within the brain. Here, we sought to determine whether activation of the interleukin 1 receptor (IL1R) drives the increase in the depth and amount of sleep that occurs subsequent to methamphetamine-induced wakefulness. IL1R-deficient mice and wild type control mice were subjected to systemic methamphetamine (1 and 2mg/kg) and saline treatments. The wake-promoting effect of methamphetamine was modestly potentiated by IL1R-deficiency. Additionally, the increase in time spent in NREMS subsequent to methamphetamine-induced wakefulness in wild type mice was abolished in IL1R-deficient mice. The increase in time spent asleep after 3h of behaviorally enforced wakefulness was also abolished in IL1R-deficient mice. Increases in EEG slow wave activity triggered by methamphetamine and sleep deprivation were of equal magnitude in IL1R-deficient and wild type mice. These data demonstrate that IL1R activation contributes to hypersomnolence that occurs after sleep loss, whether that sleep loss is triggered pharmacologically by methamphetamine or through behavioral sleep deprivation.
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