Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control

Inhibitory GABAergic neurons in the parafacial zone (PZGABA) are essential for slow wave sleep (SWS). Since existing literature about the heterogenous population of PZ neurons is lacking, questions remain regarding the non-GABAergic sleep active PZ neurons. This study seeks to determine if glutamate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Erickson, Evelyn T. M.
Format: Others
Published: eScholarship@UMMS 2020
Subjects:
PZ
Online Access:https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/1100
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2109&context=gsbs_diss
id ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsbs_diss-2109
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsbs_diss-21092021-09-15T05:14:15Z Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control Erickson, Evelyn T. M. Inhibitory GABAergic neurons in the parafacial zone (PZGABA) are essential for slow wave sleep (SWS). Since existing literature about the heterogenous population of PZ neurons is lacking, questions remain regarding the non-GABAergic sleep active PZ neurons. This study seeks to determine if glutamatergic PZ neurons expressing the transcription factor Phox2B (PZPhox2B) participate in sleep-wake control. Phox2B-IRES-Cre mice received injections of adeno-associated virus containing Cre-dependent diphtheria toxin subunit A (DTA) DNA into the PZ (PZPhox2B-DTA). Analysis of injection sites revealed transfection covering the PZ and the locus coeruleus, also known to express Phox2B. We recorded the sleep-wake cycle of PZPhox2B-DTA mice and compared them with control mice, analyzing their sleep-wake quantity, fragmentation, and power spectral distribution. We found total amounts and cortical power for wakefulness, SWS, and REM sleep of PZPhox2B-DTA mice were unaffected. There was fragmentation in wakefulness during the active period for PZPhox2B-DTA mice, seen as a significant reduction in the amount of time and number of episodes spent in the longest bout; however, wakefulness during the rest period was not significantly altered. No significant change was found in the bout numbers and amounts for SWS and REM sleep of PZPhox2B-DTA mice. I was unable to confirm targeted ablation of PZPhox2B-DTA neurons due to a lack of reliable antibody staining. Therefore, it remains possible that ablation of PZPhox2B neurons was incomplete and the wakeful fragmentation is due to neuronal ablation outside of the PZ, such as in the neighboring LC. 2020-08-31T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/1100 https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2109&context=gsbs_diss Licensed under a Creative Commons license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ GSBS Dissertations and Theses eScholarship@UMMS Sleep Wake Control Parafacial Zone PZ Phox2B Behavioral Neurobiology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sleep Wake Control
Parafacial Zone
PZ
Phox2B
Behavioral Neurobiology
spellingShingle Sleep Wake Control
Parafacial Zone
PZ
Phox2B
Behavioral Neurobiology
Erickson, Evelyn T. M.
Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
description Inhibitory GABAergic neurons in the parafacial zone (PZGABA) are essential for slow wave sleep (SWS). Since existing literature about the heterogenous population of PZ neurons is lacking, questions remain regarding the non-GABAergic sleep active PZ neurons. This study seeks to determine if glutamatergic PZ neurons expressing the transcription factor Phox2B (PZPhox2B) participate in sleep-wake control. Phox2B-IRES-Cre mice received injections of adeno-associated virus containing Cre-dependent diphtheria toxin subunit A (DTA) DNA into the PZ (PZPhox2B-DTA). Analysis of injection sites revealed transfection covering the PZ and the locus coeruleus, also known to express Phox2B. We recorded the sleep-wake cycle of PZPhox2B-DTA mice and compared them with control mice, analyzing their sleep-wake quantity, fragmentation, and power spectral distribution. We found total amounts and cortical power for wakefulness, SWS, and REM sleep of PZPhox2B-DTA mice were unaffected. There was fragmentation in wakefulness during the active period for PZPhox2B-DTA mice, seen as a significant reduction in the amount of time and number of episodes spent in the longest bout; however, wakefulness during the rest period was not significantly altered. No significant change was found in the bout numbers and amounts for SWS and REM sleep of PZPhox2B-DTA mice. I was unable to confirm targeted ablation of PZPhox2B-DTA neurons due to a lack of reliable antibody staining. Therefore, it remains possible that ablation of PZPhox2B neurons was incomplete and the wakeful fragmentation is due to neuronal ablation outside of the PZ, such as in the neighboring LC.
author Erickson, Evelyn T. M.
author_facet Erickson, Evelyn T. M.
author_sort Erickson, Evelyn T. M.
title Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
title_short Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
title_full Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
title_fullStr Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Role of Phox2B-expressing Glutamatergic Parafacial Zone Neurons in Sleep Wake Control
title_sort investigating the role of phox2b-expressing glutamatergic parafacial zone neurons in sleep wake control
publisher eScholarship@UMMS
publishDate 2020
url https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/1100
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2109&context=gsbs_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT ericksonevelyntm investigatingtheroleofphox2bexpressingglutamatergicparafacialzoneneuronsinsleepwakecontrol
_version_ 1719481081245204480