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Staying awake – a genetic region that hinders α2 adrenergic receptor agonist‐induced sleep
Authors:Valentina Ferretti  Zhe Zhang  Raquel Yustos  Fei Lan  Qianzi Yang  Dorothy W. U. Overington  Alexei L. Vyssotski  Hein A. van Lith  William Wisden  Nicholas P. Franks
Affiliation:1. Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, , South Kensington, London, SW7 2AZ UK;2. Institute of Neuroinformatics, University of Zurich/ETH Zurich, , Zurich, Switzerland;3. Division of Animal Welfare & Laboratory Animal Science, Department of Animals in Science and Society, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, , Utrecht, The Netherlands;4. Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, , Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract:How external stimuli prevent the onset of sleep has been little studied. This is usually considered to be a non‐specific type of phenomenon. However, the hypnotic drug dexmedetomidine, an agonist at α2 adrenergic receptors, has unusual properties that make it useful for investigating this question. Dexmedetomidine is considered to produce an ‘arousable’ sleep‐like state, so that patients or animals given dexmedetomidine become alert following modest stimulation. We hypothesized that it might be more difficult to make mice unconscious with dexmedetomidine if there was a sufficient external stimulus. Employing a motorized rotating cylinder, which provided a continuous and controlled arousal stimulus, we quantitatively measured the ability of such a stimulus to prevent dexmedetomidine loss of righting reflex in two inbred strains of mice (C57BL/6 and 129X1). We found that whereas the C57BL/6 strain required a strong stimulus to prevent dexmedetomidine‐induced hypnosis, the 129X1 strain stayed awake even with minimal stimuli. Remarkably, this could be calibrated as a simple threshold trait, i.e. a binary ‘yes–no’ response, which after crossing the two mouse strains behaved as a dominant‐like trait. We carried out a genome‐wide linkage analysis on the F2 progeny to determine if the ability of a stimulus to prevent dexmedetomidine hypnosis could be mapped to one or more chromosomal regions. We identified a locus on chromosome 4 with an associated Logarithm of Odds score exceeding the pre‐established threshold level. These results show that complex traits, such as the ability of a stimulus to reverse drug‐induced hypnosis, may have precise genetic determinants.
Keywords:alpha2a adrenergic receptor  sedation  sleep  wakefulness
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