Hypnotic effect of thalidomide is independent of teratogenic ubiquitin/proteasome pathway.
Yuki HiroseTomohiro KitazonoMaiko SezakiManabu AbeKenji SakimuraHiromasa FunatoHiroshi HandaKaspar E VogtMasashi YanagisawaPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Thalidomide exerts its teratogenic and immunomodulatory effects by binding to cereblon (CRBN) and thereby inhibiting/modifying the CRBN-mediated ubiquitination pathway consisting of the Cullin4-DDB1-ROC1 E3 ligase complex. The mechanism of thalidomide's classical hypnotic effect remains largely unexplored, however. Here we examined whether CRBN is involved in the hypnotic effect of thalidomide by generating mice harboring a thalidomide-resistant mutant allele of Crbn (Crbn YW/AA knock-in mice). Thalidomide increased non-REM sleep time in Crbn YW/AA knock-in homozygotes and heterozygotes to a similar degree as seen in wild-type littermates. Thalidomide similarly depressed excitatory synaptic transmission in the cortical slices obtained from wild-type and Crbn YW/AA homozygous knock-in mice without affecting GABAergic inhibition. Thalidomide induced Fos expression in vasopressin-containing neurons of the supraoptic nucleus and reduced Fos expression in the tuberomammillary nuclei. Thus, thalidomide's hypnotic effect seems to share some downstream mechanisms with general anesthetics and GABAA-activating sedatives but does not involve the teratogenic CRBN-mediated ubiquitin/proteasome pathway.