Activation of state-regulating neurochemical systems in newborn and embryonic chicks Articles uri icon

authors

  • CHAN, AIMEE
  • LI, SIHAN
  • LEE, AHN R.
  • LEUNG, JOSEPH
  • YIP, ALISSA
  • BIRD, JAIMIE
  • GODDEN, KYLE E.
  • MARTINEZ GONZALEZ, DOLORES
  • RATTENBORG, NIELS C.
  • BALABAN, EVAN STUART
  • POMPEIANO, MARIA

publication date

  • September 2016

start page

  • 219

end page

  • 234

volume

  • 339

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0306-4522

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1873-7544

abstract

  • Coordinated activity in different sets of widely-projecting neurochemical systems characterize waking (W) and sleep (S). How and when this coordination is achieved during development is not known. We used embryos and newborns of a precocial bird species (chickens) to assess developmental activation in different neurochemical systems using cFos expression, which has been extensively employed to examine cellular activation during S and W in adult mammals. Similarly to adult mammals, newborn awake chicks showed significantly higher cFos expression in W-active hypocretin/orexin (H/O), serotonergic Dorsal Raphe, noradrenergic Locus Coeruleus and cholinergic Laterodorsal and Pedunculopontine Tegmental (Ch-LDT/PT) neurons when compared to sleeping chicks. cFos expression was significantly correlated both between these systems, and with the amount of W. S-active melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) neurons showed very low cFos expression with no difference between sleeping and awake chicks, possibly due to the very short duration of S episodes. In embryonic chicks, cFos expression was low or absent across all five systems at embryonic day (E) 12. Unexpectedly, a strong activation was seen at E16 in H/O neurons. The highest activation of Ch-LDT/PT (also S-active) and MCH neurons was seen at E20. These data suggest that maturation of arousal systems is achieved soon after hatching, while S-control networks are active in late chick embryos.

subjects

  • Biology and Biomedicine
  • Psychology

keywords

  • chick embryo; newborn chick; sleep; waking, widely-projecting neurochemical systems; cfos