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Disrupted sleep-wake regulation in the MCI-Park mouse model of Parkinson’s disease

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Preprint November 15, 2023

Published March 11, 2024

Disrupted sleep has a profound adverse impact on lives of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and their caregivers. Sleep disturbances are exceedingly common in PD, with substantial heterogeneity in type, timing, and severity. Among the most common sleep-related symptoms reported by PD patients are insomnia, excessive daytime sleepiness, and sleep fragmentation, characterized by interruptions and decreased continuity of sleep. Alterations in brain wave activity, as measured on the electroencephalogram (EEG), also occur in PD, with changes in the pattern and relative contributions of different frequency bands of the EEG spectrum to overall EEG activity in different vigilance states consistently observed. The mechanisms underlying these PD-associated sleep-wake abnormalities are poorly understood, and they are ineffectively treated by conventional PD therapies. To help fill this gap in knowledge, a new progressive model of PD - the MCI-Park mouse- was studied. Near the transition to the parkinsonian state, these mice exhibited significantly altered sleep-wake regulation, including increased wakefulness, decreased non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, increased sleep fragmentation, reduced rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and altered EEG activity patterns. These sleep-wake abnormalities mirror those identified in PD patients. Thus, this model may help elucidate the circuit mechanisms underlying sleep disruption in PD and identify targets for novel therapeutic approaches.
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  • Original Research

Meet the Authors

  • Patricia Gonzalez-Rodriguez, PhD

    Key Personnel: Team Surmeier

    University of Seville

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    ‘Lindsay’ Xiaolin Huang, PhD

    Key Personnel: Team Surmeier

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Yang Dan, PhD

    Co-PI (Core Leadership): Team Surmeier

    University of California, Berkeley

  • James Surmeier, PhD

    Lead PI (Core Leadership): Team Surmeier

    Northwestern University

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    Keith C Summa

    External Collaborator

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    Peng Jiang

    External Collaborator

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    Xuanyi Lin

    External Collaborator

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    Martha Hotz Vitaterna

    External Collaborator

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    Fred W. Turek

    External Collaborator

Aligning Science Across Parkinson's
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