Modulation of sickness behavior by sleep: the role of neurochemical and neuroinflammatory pathways in mice

Data
2009-08-01
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Artigo
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Activation of the immune system elicits several behavioral changes that are collectively called sickness behavior and consists in a strategy to overcome infection. Steep deprivation can increase susceptibility to pathogens and to behavioral alterations. Thus, the present study aimed to determine how paradoxical steep deprivation (PSD) affects the behavioral and neurochemical responses to lipopotysaccharide (LPS, potent activator of the immune response). Adult inbred mice were paradoxical steep deprived (72 h), whereas the control group was kept in their home cages. Both groups received either an injection of saline or LPS (5, 10 or 20 mu g/animal ip) before behavioral tasks and tissue collection. During the recovery sleep period, LPS provoked a strong inhibition of steep rebound due to a suppression of paradoxical steep. PSD increased the susceptibility of mice to LPS-induced immobility in the open field, which was capable of affecting the anxiety-like behavior also. These altered behavioral responses to LPS were accompanied by reduction in dopamine turnover within the striatum and increased expression of cyctooxygenase-2 in the cortex. the study provides some insights into how the steep-wake cycle affects the expression of sickness behavior induced by LPS. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.
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European Neuropsychopharmacology. Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V., v. 19, n. 8, p. 589-602, 2009.
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