Chronic sleep restriction in the rotenone Parkinson's disease model in rats reveals peripheral early-phase biomarkers.
Juliane FagottiAdriano D S TargaLais S RodriguesAna Carolina D NosedaFlávia W C DorieuxFranciele F ScaranteJessica L IlkiwFernando M LouzadaNamrata R ChowdhuryDaan R van der VeenBenita MiddletonJeroen L A PenningsJonathan R SwannDebra J SkeneMarcelo M S LimaPublished in: Scientific reports (2019)
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic disorder that presents a range of premotor signs, such as sleep disturbances and cognitive decline, which are key non-motor features of the disease. Increasing evidence of a possible association between sleep disruption and the neurodegenerative process suggests that sleep impairment could produce a detectable metabolic signature on the disease. In order to integrate neurocognitive and metabolic parameters, we performed untargeted and targeted metabolic profiling of the rotenone PD model in a chronic sleep restriction (SR) (6 h/day for 21 days) condition. We found that SR combined with PD altered several behavioural (reversal of locomotor activity impairment; cognitive impairment; delay of rest-activity rhythm) and metabolic parameters (branched-chain amino acids, tryptophan pathway, phenylalanine, and lipoproteins, pointing to mitochondrial impairment). If combined, our results bring a plethora of parameters that represents reliable early-phase PD biomarkers which can easily be measured and could be translated to human studies.