Biological sex influences sleep phenotype in mice experiencing spontaneous opioid withdrawal

Aversive symptoms, including insomnia experienced during opioid withdrawal, are a major drive to relapse; however, withdrawal-associated sleep symptomatology has been little explored in preclinical models. We describe here a model of opioid withdrawal in mice that resembles the sleep phenotype chara...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sleep research 2024-05, Vol.33 (3), p.e14037-e14037
Hauptverfasser: Tisdale, Ryan K, Sun, Yu, Park, Sunmee, Ma, Shun-Chieh, Haire, Meghan, Allocca, Giancarlo, Bruchas, Michael R, Morairty, Stephen R, Kilduff, Thomas S
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container_title Journal of sleep research
container_volume 33
creator Tisdale, Ryan K
Sun, Yu
Park, Sunmee
Ma, Shun-Chieh
Haire, Meghan
Allocca, Giancarlo
Bruchas, Michael R
Morairty, Stephen R
Kilduff, Thomas S
description Aversive symptoms, including insomnia experienced during opioid withdrawal, are a major drive to relapse; however, withdrawal-associated sleep symptomatology has been little explored in preclinical models. We describe here a model of opioid withdrawal in mice that resembles the sleep phenotype characteristic of withdrawal in humans. Male and female C57BL/6 mice were instrumented with telemeters to record electroencephalogram, electromyogram, activity and subcutaneous temperature. All mice received two treatments separated by a 16-day washout period: (1) saline (volume: 10 ml kg ); or (2) ascending doses of morphine (5, 10, 20, 40 and 80 mg kg ; volume: 10 ml kg ) for 5 days at Zeitgeber time 1 and Zeitgeber time 13. Recordings for the first 71 hr after treatment discontinuation (withdrawal days 1-3) and for 24 hr on withdrawal days 5 and 7 were scored for sleep/wake state, and sleep architecture and electroencephalogram spectral data were analysed. Morphine was acutely wake- and activity-promoting, and non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep were increased during the dark phase on withdrawal day 2 in both sexes. While non-rapid eye movement delta power (0.5-4.0 Hz), a measure of sleep intensity, was reduced during the light phase on withdrawal day 1 and the dark phase on withdrawal day 2 in both sexes, female mice also exhibited changes in the duration and the number of bouts of sleep/wake states. These observations of fragmented sleep on withdrawal days 1-3 suggest poorer sleep consolidation and a more pronounced withdrawal-associated sleep phenotype in female than in male mice. These data may indicate a greater sensitivity to morphine, a more distinct aversive sleep phenotype and/or a faster escalation to dependence in female mice.
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title Biological sex influences sleep phenotype in mice experiencing spontaneous opioid withdrawal
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