eLife (Sep 2022)

Non-rapid eye movement sleep determines resilience to social stress

  • Brittany J Bush,
  • Caroline Donnay,
  • Eva-Jeneé A Andrews,
  • Darielle Lewis-Sanders,
  • Cloe L Gray,
  • Zhimei Qiao,
  • Allison J Brager,
  • Hadiya Johnson,
  • Hamadi CS Brewer,
  • Sahil Sood,
  • Talib Saafir,
  • Morris Benveniste,
  • Ketema N Paul,
  • J Christopher Ehlen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.80206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

Resilience, the ability to overcome stressful conditions, is found in most mammals and varies significantly among individuals. A lack of resilience can lead to the development of neuropsychiatric and sleep disorders, often within the same individual. Despite extensive research into the brain mechanisms causing maladaptive behavioral-responses to stress, it is not clear why some individuals exhibit resilience. To examine if sleep has a determinative role in maladaptive behavioral-response to social stress, we investigated individual variations in resilience using a social-defeat model for male mice. Our results reveal a direct, causal relationship between sleep amount and resilience—demonstrating that sleep increases after social-defeat stress only occur in resilient mice. Further, we found that within the prefrontal cortex, a regulator of maladaptive responses to stress, pre-existing differences in sleep regulation predict resilience. Overall, these results demonstrate that increased NREM sleep, mediated cortically, is an active response to social-defeat stress that plays a determinative role in promoting resilience. They also show that differences in resilience are strongly correlated with inter-individual variability in sleep regulation.

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