Introduction Chronic sleep disruption (CSD) in young adult mice leads to phenotypes consistent with early (pre-plaque) Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), including increased Aβ and hippocampal neuron loss. Mechanisms underlying this injury are not known. Both acute sleep loss and AD activate cofilin, a regulator of actin dynamics. Activated cofilin (AC) in AD mouse models can impart neural injury, increase Aβ, and cofilin translocation to the mitochondria delays cytosolic Ca2+ clearance. We are critically testing the role of AC in chronic short sleep (CSS) and sleep fragmentation (SF) neural injury. Methods Synapse loss was studied using STED confocal microscopy and Imaris in CSS (n=9) and rested (n=10) mice. Synapses were identified as overlaps of pre- and postsynaptic densities. Percent area of cofilin was measured with FIJI. To further understand if and how wake-induced cofilin activation induces sleep-loss synapse and neural injury, we implanted AAV9CAMKII-GCaMP6f and then GRIN lenses, and later studied CAMKII calcium transients in CA1 of WT controls (n=4) and SF mice (n=4) by measuring GCaMP6f calcium transients. We developed a Shiny R application to analyze the frequency of Ca2+ spikes, ΔF/F0, and the rising and clearance patterns of spikes. To directly test cofilin’s role in delayed calcium clearance, we studied the calcium transients in hAPP mice (n=2) after injection of AAV-CAMKII-CofilinS3A to express AC and GCaMP6f. All data were analyzed with two-way ANOVA or unpaired t-tests. Results Results reveal significant synapse loss in CA1 of CSS mice (CSS=48.8±10.3; Rested=83.4±8.4), t(16)=2.63, p<0.02, and increased cofilin activation (AC=19.8±3.41; Rested=8.76±1.95), t(16)=8.43, p<0.0001. SF mice reveal an increase in NREM sleep firing rates, F(1,1)=22.0, p<0.001. In contrast, hAPP-AC mice show significantly increased ΔF/F0, F(1,1)=356, p<0.0001, prolonged calcium influx, F(1,1)=18.6, p<0.02, and prolonged calcium clearance duration, F(1,1)=23.9, p<0.01, but not increased firing frequencies. Conclusion CSS induces CA1 synapse loss and cofilin activation in WT mice. Increased CAMKII calcium ΔF/F0 occurs through different pathways in SF and AC, suggesting additional factors in CSD neural injury. Support (If Any) NIH AG054104; AG064231
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