There are significant decrements in sleep with age. These include fragmentation of sleep, increased wake time, decrease in the length of sleep bouts, decrease in the amplitude of the diurnal rhythm of sleep, decrease in rapid eye movement sleep and a profound decrease in electroencephalogram Delta power (0.3-4 Hz). Old rats also have less sleep in response to 12 h-prolonged wakefulness (W) indicating a reduction in sleep drive with age. The mechanism contributing to the decline in sleep with aging is not known but cannot be attributed to loss of neurons implicated in sleep since the numbers of neurons in the ventral lateral preoptic area, a region implicated in generating sleep, is similar between young (3.5 months) and old (21.5 months) rats. One possibility for the reduced sleep drive with age is that sleep-wake active neurons may be stimulated less as a result of a decline in endogenous sleep factors. Here, we test this hypothesis by focusing on the purine, adenosine (AD), one such sleep factor that increases after prolonged W. In experiment 1, microdialysis measurements of AD in the basal forebrain at 1 h intervals reveal that old (21.5 months) rats have more extracellular levels of AD compared with young rats across the 24 h diurnal cycle. In experiment 2, old rats kept awake for 6 h (first half of lights-on period) accumulated more AD compared with young rats. If old rats have more AD then why do they sleep less? To investigate whether changes in sensitivity of the AD receptor contribute to the decline in sleep, experiments 3 and 4 determined that for the same concentration of AD or the AD receptor 1 agonist, cyclohexyladenosine, old rats have less sleep compared with young rats. We conclude that even though old rats have more AD, a reduction in the sensitivity of the AD receptor to the ligand does not transduce the AD signal at the same strength as in young rats and may be a contributing factor to the decline in sleep drive in the elderly.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2003.09.015 | DOI Listing |
Aging (Albany NY)
January 2025
School of Medicine, National University of La Plata (UNLP), La Plata, Argentina.
In middle-aged (MA) female rats, we have demonstrated that intrahypothalamic gene therapy for insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) extends the regular cyclicity of the animals beyond 10 months (the age at which MA rats stop ovulating). Here, we implemented long-term OSKM gene therapy in the hypothalamus of young female rats. The main goal was to extend fertility in the treated animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucl Med Biol
January 2025
Central Research Laboratory, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K., Hamana, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka 434-8601, Japan.
Background: The ovary is an important female organ not only for pregnancy but also for the regulation of life activities via hormone release. Ovarian function is measured by blood hormone levels, but the hormone level reflects only the ovarian reserve and no other essential ovarian functions, such as nurturing and expelling follicles. Ovarian fibrosis is related to essential ovarian function; however, the existing methods for evaluating fibrosis are invasive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife (Basel)
December 2024
Institute of Organic Chemistry with Centre of Phytochemistry, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Laboratory of Biologically Active Substances, 4000 Plovdiv, Bulgaria.
Background: Cardiac aging is associated with myocardial remodeling and reduced angiogenesis. Counteracting these changes with natural products is a preventive strategy with great potential. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of fruit juice (AMJ) supplementation on age-related myocardial remodeling in aged rat hearts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
December 2024
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Tabuk, Tabuk 71491, Saudi Arabia.
Radiotherapy is a critical treatment for cancer but poses significant risks to ovarian tissue, particularly in young females, leading to premature ovarian failure (POF). This study examines the therapeutic potential of etoricoxib nanostructured lipid carriers (ETO-NLC) in mitigating radiation-induced ovarian damage in female rats. Twenty-four female rats were randomly assigned to four groups: a control group receiving normal saline, a group exposed to a single dose of whole-body gamma radiation (6 Gy), a group treated with etoricoxib (10 mg/kg) post-radiation, and a group treated with ETO-NLC for 14 days following radiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Myelination is a key biological process wherein glial cells such as oligodendrocytes wrap myelin around neuronal axons, forming an insulative sheath that accelerates signal propagation down the axon. A major obstacle to understanding myelination is the challenge of visualizing and reproducibly quantifying this inherently three-dimensional process in vitro. To this end, we previously developed artificial axons (AAs), a biocompatible platform consisting of 3D-printed hydrogel-based axon mimics designed to more closely recapitulate the micrometer-scale diameter and sub-kilopascal mechanical stiffness of biological axons.
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