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The Role of Nucleus Accumbens Core/Shell in Sleep-Wake Regulation and their Involvement in Modafinil-Induced Arousal

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2012

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Public Library of Science
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Qiu, Mei-Hong, Wei Liu, Wei-Min Qu, Yoshihiro Urade, Jun Lu, and Zhi-Li Huang. 2012. The role of nucleus accumbens core/shell in sleep-wake regulation and their involvement in modafinil-induced arousal. PLoS ONE 7(9): e45471.

Abstract

Background: We have previously shown that modafinil promotes wakefulness via dopamine receptor D1 and D2 receptors; however, the locus where dopamine acts has not been identified. We proposed that the nucleus accumbens (NAc) that receives the ventral tegmental area dopamine inputs play an important role not only in reward and addiction but also in sleep-wake cycle and in mediating modafinil-induced arousal. Methodology/Principal Findings: In the present study, we further explored the role of NAc in sleep-wake cycle and sleep homeostasis by ablating the NAc core and shell, respectively, and examined arousal response following modafinil administration. We found that discrete NAc core and shell lesions produced 26.5% and 17.4% increase in total wakefulness per day, respectively, with sleep fragmentation and a reduced sleep rebound after a 6-hr sleep deprivation compared to control. Finally, NAc core but not shell lesions eliminated arousal effects of modafinil. Conclusions/Significance: These results indicate that the NAc regulates sleep-wake behavior and mediates arousal effects of the midbrain dopamine system and stimulant modafinil.

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Biology, Anatomy and Physiology, Neurological System, Neuroanatomy, Physiological Processes, Sleep, Neuroscience, Behavioral Neuroscience, Neural Homeostasis, Neurophysiology, Medicine, Neurology, Neuropharmacology, Sleep Disorders

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