We describe a high-throughput method of measuring sleep by means of activity-based home-cage monitoring. This method offers advantages over traditional EEG-based methods. It is well validated for the determination of total sleep duration and can be a powerful tool to monitor sleep in rodent models of human disease.
Traditionally, sleep is monitored by an electroencephalogram (EEG). EEG studies in rodents require surgical implantation of the electrodes followed by a long recovery period. To perform an EEG recording, the animal is connected to a receiver, creating an unnatural tether to the head-mount. EEG monitoring is time consuming, carries risk to the animal, and is not a completely natural setting for the measurement of sleep. Alternative methods to detect sleep, particularly in a high-throughput fashion, would greatly advance the field of sleep research. Here, we describe a validated method for detecting sleep via activity-based home-cage monitoring. Previous studies have shown that sleep assessed via this method has a high degree of agreement with sleep defined by traditional EEG-based measures. Whereas this method is validated for total sleep time, it is important to note that sleep bout duration should be assessed by an EEG which has better temporal resolution. The EEG can also differentiate rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep, giving more detail about the exact nature of sleep. Nevertheless, activity-based sleep determination can be used to analyze multiple days of undisturbed sleep and to assess sleep as a response to an acute event (like stress). Here, we show the power of this system to detect the response of mice to daily intraperitoneal injections.
Sleep has important functions for the restoration of the body and brain following the daily burden of wakefulness1. It has been shown that sleep plays a role in memory retention and general brain plasticity1. The EEG is the gold standard to detect sleep2. In rodents, EEG monitoring requires surgical implantation of electrodes affixed to a head-mount, after which the animal needs a period of time to recover2. After the recovery, the animal is attached to the recording device and is given another period of habituation2. Because of these necessary periods of recovery and habituation, EEG is time consuming and laborious and cannot be reasonably performed on a large scale. Additionally, the surgical procedure of electrode implantation carries an inherent risk to the animal. Finally, the data analysis for scoring sleep in EEG studies is also very laborious. An alternative, non-invasive, high-throughput method of sleep monitoring would greatly aid rodent sleep research.
An activity-based home-cage monitoring system used to detect sleep addresses the limitations of EEG studies. The simple premise is that an inactive animal is likely a sleeping animal. It has been shown that 40 s of continuous inactivity (binned in 10 s epochs) is a reliable measure of sleep as measured with an EEG (shown to have 88-94% agreement)3. Home-cage monitoring systems can be used to study large groups of animals with minimal setup time. We have shown that it takes animals approximately one day to habituate to individual housing in the home-cage monitoring system4 in contrast to the weeks of recovery needed for EEG studies2. In addition, some setups can also detect physiological parameters such as core body temperature, heart rate, activity, and feeding. Temperature and heart rate are determined from the implantation of a small transmitter. These parameters can provide more information about the mouse and may be used in parallel with the sleep recording to further add to our understanding of sleep and how it is affected.
While it is a powerful tool, there are some limitations to the types of data that can be acquired from activity-based home-cage monitoring. EEG studies can differentiate between REM and non-REM sleep, which may be important for a deeper understanding of sleep architecture. Activity-based home-cage monitoring systems can only provide data for total sleep duration. In addition, although the output for activity-based home-cage monitoring gives information about sleep bout duration, we cannot accurately assess bout duration because of the inherent limitation of 40 s intervals3. Despite these limitations, home-cage monitoring of sleep duration provides an important biological measure that may influence many downstream factors including the animal's health and behavior5.
Activity-based home-cage monitoring has been used to detect sleep in many studies indicating its versatility. We cite a sample of these studies4,6,7,8,9,10,11,12. In addition to the method presented, there are other methods of detecting sleep via activity-based monitoring, each containing its own limitations13,14. Some of these studies examine long periods of uninterrupted sleep (72 h) while some examine sleep in blocks of 24 h. In this study, we present sleep analysis for each 24 h period after the response to daily intraperitoneal (IP) injections and to periodic cage changes in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome (Fmr1 KO mice). We chose Fmr1 KO mice because they have reduced sleep4 and are hypothesized to be hyper-reactive to sensory information15. Our data highlight the ability to detect changes in sleep patterns in response to a stressful event. This method is ideal for obtaining general information about sleep in large cohorts of mice. The method can be useful for understanding the effects of specific genetic alterations on sleep, the effects of pharmacological treatments, or responses to events, such as a stressor. In addition, the method provides a simple means of screening for a response before initiating more involved studies.
All the procedures were approved by the National Institute of Mental Health Animal Care and Use Committee and performed in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guidelines on the Care and Use of Animals.
1. Setting up the Sleep Detection Units
2. Software Setup
3. Animal Setup
4. Drug Preparation and Injections
5. Software to Record Sleep
6. Data Analysis
To determine the effect of daily injections on sleep and whether animals habituate to the injections, we performed daily IP injections for 14 consecutive days at 9:00 AM (light cycle began at 6:00 AM) and recorded sleep duration in 12 Fmr1 KO C57Bl/6J mice. We used a within subjects' design, injecting each animal with normal saline for 4 consecutive days (Days 1-4) and then 30% cyclodextrin for the following ten consecutive days (Days 5-14). Cyclodextrin was selected because it can be used to dissolve hydrophobic compounds for drug administration and we were interested in how vehicle injection may influence sleep in mice. Given the long duration of recording, we also changed cages two times per week throughout the study. Cage changes were performed at the same time as the injections on the days indicated. We report average percent sleep duration for the light and dark phase across the 14 days of injections and cage changes (Figure 1). Animals did not receive an additional habituation period to the sleep apparatus without injections. We found a significant phase x day interaction (F = 16.463) (p < 0.001), indicating that variation in sleep duration over the fourteen days differed between the light and dark phases. Post hoct-tests revealed that, in the light phase, sleep duration on Day 1 was different than that on almost all other days. This is consistent with the effects of the habituation to the sleep setup even without injections4. Also in the light phase, sleep duration on Days 6, 9, and 13 (when cages were changed following IP injections) was significantly different (p < 0.05) than sleep duration on neighboring days indicating that the cage change alters the sleep duration. While there is slight day-to-day variation in sleep durations (which is a normal occurrence), the significant decrease in sleep duration in the light phase when cages were changed suggests that cage changes affect sleep. There was no significant difference in sleep duration in the light phase on days of cyclodextrin administration without cage changes (i.e., Days 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, and 14). These data indicate that the mice habituated to IP injections of cyclodextrin in a relatively short time. In the dark phase, sleep duration was different between Days 2 and 6 (the first cage change) suggesting potential compensation for the decrease in sleep duration in the light phase that occurred on Day 6. An alternate presentation of the sleep duration that breaks Days 4 to 6 into 2 h increments shows the immediate effect of injections and cage changes on sleep duration (Figure 2).
Figure 1: Percentage of sleep time in the light (A) and the dark phases (B) are shown across the fourteen-day recording period. Mice received daily IP injections of either saline (white arrows) or 30% cyclodextrin (black arrows) at 9 AM in the light phase. Boxes around the arrows indicate a cage change. The phase x day interaction was statistically significant (p < 0.001). Post hoc t-tests suggest that sleep duration differed in the light phase on Day 1 from other days, indicating the habituation to both the sleep setup and the IP injections. Sleep was reduced by cage changes on Days 6, 9, and 13 compared to other days (Day 5, 7, 8, 10 11, 12, and 14). Sleep duration following cyclodextrin injections was relatively stable across the days when cages were not changed indicating that the mice habituated to the IP cyclodextrin injections. Points represent means ± standard errors of the mean (SEM) in 12 mice. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Percentage of sleep duration across 2 h frames beginning after saline injections on Day 4 and ending at the end of Day 6. Each data point is presented as the average sleep of the mice during the following a 2 h period. Mice received daily IP injections of either saline (white arrow) or 30% cyclodextrin (black arrows). Injections were given at 9 AM and sleep recording resumed after 1-1.5 h. Boxes around the arrows indicate a cage change. Cages were changed following injections at 9 AM and sleep recordings resumed at 11 AM. Gray lines indicate sleep that occurred in the light cycle while black lines indicate sleep that occurred in the dark cycle. Points represent means ± SEM in 12 mice. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Here, we present a noninvasive, high-throughput method for determination of sleep duration based on activity monitoring in the home-cage. This method of assessment of total sleep time has been validated against EEG studies3. Activity-based home-cage monitoring is simple, noninvasive, and applicable to population studies in large numbers of animals. It is limited in that it cannot give detailed information about sleep (such as sleep bout duration and sleep stages).
Pitfalls to this method of analysis are fairly easy to detect. It is important that none of the beams are obstructed during the study. This might occur by a build-up of bedding in an area of the cage. This can be minimized by limiting the height of the bedding to 3 mm and removing additional nesting material. This amount of bedding is sufficient to cover the cage bottom and low bedding volumes have not been found to affect stress levels in mice 17. Additional nesting material might also interfere with beam clearance, and therefore should not be provided. It is also important to ensure all beams are working properly during the setup procedure and to examine the cages before ending the study and extracting the data. If a beam is malfunctioning, an overestimation of sleep duration could occur. A beam malfunction or an obstruction can be detected during the data analysis phase by carefully looking at the CSV file. Instances of high counts on one axis without any counts on the other axis indicate that one of the sets of beams was malfunctioning or obstructed. This could be due to alignment issues (the detector not properly aligned with the emitter), connection issues, or equipment malfunction. Analysis of the sleep file only would miss this information, and sleep duration could be overestimated if it is not accounting for both directions of beams.
Another consideration of home-cage sleep monitoring is the need for single housing. Mice must be singly housed to ensure sleep recording is specific to each mouse being studied. Therefore, the duration of sleep assessment should be limited to prevent prolonged social isolation. Additionally, because animals need to be singly housed for home-cage monitoring, studying animals prior to weaning is not possible. Also, we have shown that it takes about 24 h to habituate to the single housing home-cage monitoring condition in mice at several different ages, but it may be necessary to test for habituation if different strains or transgenic mice that are being studied4. The results of the current study also suggest that cages should not be changed throughout the experiment to avoid the associated reduction in sleep.
This method has the power to study sleep in large numbers of animals with minimal labor and time. Therefore, it promises to be useful for behavioral phenotyping of different rodent lines and for assessing the effects of different manipulations (including pharmacological studies) on sleep.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to acknowledge the NIH Fellows Editorial Board for their editorial assistance. This research was funded by the Intramural Research Program of the NIMH (ZIA MH00889). RMS was also supported by a FRAXA Postdoctoral Fellowship.
Comprehensive Lab Animal Monitoring System (CLAMS) | Columbus Instruments | Equipment and software to analyze sleep duration | |
Captisol Research Grade | Captisol | RC-0C7-100 | Captisol for dissolving hydrophobic compounds |
30 G BD Needle 1/2 inch | BD | 305106 | Needle for injections |
BD Disposable Syringes | Fisher | 14-823-30 | Syringes for injections |
B6.129P2-Fmr1tm1Cgr/J | Jackson Labs | 3025 | Fmr1 KO mice |
Super Mouse 750 Mouse Cage | Lab Products, Inc. | Homecages for the mice | |
SANI-Chips Bedding | PJ Murphys | Bedding for the mice |