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Authors & Affiliations
Simon Guillot, Christina Lang, Francesco Roselli, Pierre-Herve Luppi, Albert C Ludolph, Luc Dupuis, Matei Bolborea
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive motor neuron disease inexorably leading to premature death. Sleep disturbances have
been ascribed to respiratory insufficiency, muscle cramps, spasticity, or restless legs syndrome, all leading to increased wakefulness. However, a recent
neuropathological study in ALS patients described a loss of orexin-producing neurons, a neuropeptide involved in sleep and metabolic regulation,
undermining the idea that sleep alterations are linked to central and peripheral changes. Yet, sleep alterations are poorly characterized in ALS, and their
relationships to motor symptom onset, disease progression and orexin neurons remain unknown. Here, we performed a translational investigation using
polysomnography in patients and presymptomatic gene carriers of ALS. We also translated our findings into two mouse models of ALS and performed a
rescue using a pharmacological tool. For the first time, in both ALS patients and presymptomatic gene carriers, polysomnography revealed increased
wakefulness and a significant decrease in the non-rapid eye movement phase (NREM). Proving that sleep alterations are present in ALS and are indeed
predating symptoms onset. The same observations were made in our mouse models. Moreover, when administering Suvorexant, a drug antagonizing orexin
receptors, to our mouse models, it rescued these sleep alterations by decreasing wakefulness and increasing NREM bouts. This translational investigation
highlights the importance of such sleep alterations in the disease’s progression and its clinical relevance in ALS, paving the way to the potential use of
Suvorexant in the clinic.