Frontiers in Nutrition (Feb 2020)
Yokukansankachimpihange Improves the Social Isolation-Induced Sleep Disruption and Allopregnanolone Reduction in Mice
Abstract
Yokukansankachimpihange (YKSCH), a traditional Japanese medicine composed of 9 crude drugs, is designed to improve neurosis, insomnia in adults, and night crying in children. YKSCH has been reported to improve diurnal rhythm in patients with Alzheimer's disease and prolong the total sleeping time in healthy subjects. However, little is known about how YKSCH alleviates sleep disorders. Here, we investigated whether and how YKSCH treatment affected sleep latency and duration in group-housed and socially isolated mice. Male ddy mice were treated with YKSCH [1,500 mg/kg, per os (p.o.)] in group-housed or socially isolated conditions for 3–4 weeks. After the last injection, mice were intraperitoneally (i.p.) administered with pentobarbital (60 mg/kg) and the sleep latency and duration was evaluated. The results show that pretreatment with YKSCH had no effect on sleep latency or duration in group-housed mice. However, YKSCH treatment significantly improved the reduced sleep duration in socially isolated mice. This effect of YKSCH was inhibited by the administration of bicuculline (3 mg/kg, i.p.), a GABAA receptor antagonist. Furthermore, we showed that YKSCH treatment improved the decrease in allopregnanolone content and its synthase expression levels in the olfactory bulb. These results suggest that YKSCH treatment improved social isolation stress-induced insomnia via the GABAergic pathway and that the mechanism of action of YKSCH is partly due to improvement of allopregnanolone levels of expression.
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