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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol (February 12, 2004). doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00676.2003
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Submitted on November 25, 2003
Accepted on February 6, 2004

Homeostatic regulation of sleep in arrhythmic Siberian hamsters

Jennie E Larkin1, Tohei Yokogawa1, H. Craig Heller1, Paul Franken1, and Norman F Ruby1*

1 Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ruby{at}stanford.edu.

Sleep is regulated by independent yet interacting circadian and homeostatic processes. The present study used a novel approach to study sleep homeostasis in the absence of circadian influences by exposing Siberian hamsters to a simple phase delay of the photocycle to make them arrhythmic. Since these hamsters lacked any circadian organization, their sleep homeostasis could be studied in the absence of circadian interactions. Control animals retained circadian rhythmicity after the phase shift and re-entrained to the phase-shifted photocycle. These animals displayed robust daily sleep-wake rhythms with consolidated sleep during the light phase beginning about 1 h after light onset. This marked sleep-wake pattern was circadian in that it persisted in constant darkness. The distribution of sleep in the arrhythmic hamsters over 24 h was similar to that in the light phase of rhythmic animals. Therefore, daily sleep amounts were higher in arrhythmic animals compared to rhythmic ones. During 2- and 6-h sleep deprivations (SD), it was more difficult to keep arrhythmic hamsters awake than it was for rhythmic hamsters. Since the arrhythmic animals obtained more non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep during the SD, they showed a diminished compensatory response in NREMS EEG slow-wave activity during recovery sleep. When amounts of sleep during the SD were taken into account, there were no differences in sleep homeostasis between experimental and control hamsters. Thus, loss of circadian control did not alter the homeostatic response to SD. This supports the view that circadian and homeostatic influences on sleep regulation are independent processes.




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