Sleep biomarkers for stress-induced vulnerability to depression.

Sleep

Département Neurosciences & Contraintes Opérationnelles, Institut de Recherche Biomédicale des Armées (IRBA), Brétigny-sur-Orge, France.

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Stress can lead to depression, but individual vulnerability before stressful events plays a key role in how severely someone might be affected.
  • - Researchers studied rats' sleep patterns before and after a stress event (social defeat) to identify specific sleep stages linked to vulnerability to depression using electroencephalogram recordings.
  • - The study found early and late sleep biomarkers that can predict which rats are likely to become depressed, suggesting potential for developing treatments aimed at those at high risk of stress-induced depression.

Article Abstract

Stress can push individuals close to the threshold to depression. An individual's intrinsic vulnerability before a stressful event determines how close they come to the threshold of depression. Identification of vulnerability biomarkers at early (before the stressful event) and late (close to the threshold after the stressful event) stages would allow for corrective actions. Social defeat is a stressful event that triggers vulnerability to depression in half of exposed rats. We analyzed the sleep properties of rats before (baseline) and after (recovery) social defeat by telemetry electroencephalogram recordings. Using Gaussian partitioning, we identified three non-rapid eye movement stages (N-S1, N-S2, and N-S3) in rats based on a sleep depth index (relative δ power) and a cortical activity index (fractal dimension). We found (1) that, at baseline, N-S3 lability and high-θ relative power in wake identified, with 82% accuracy, the population of rats that will become vulnerable to depression after social defeat, and (2) that, at recovery, N-S1 instability identified vulnerable rats with 83% accuracy. Thus, our study identified early and late sleep biomarkers of vulnerability to depression, opening the way to the development of treatments at a prodromal stage for high sensitivity to stress, and for stress-induced vulnerability to depression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsad068DOI Listing

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