Behavioural brain research
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This review describes a series of animal experiments that investigate the role of endogenous adenosine (AD) in sleep. We propose that AD is a modulator of the sleepiness associated with prolonged wakefulness. More specifically, we suggest that, during prolonged wakefulness, extracellular AD accumulates selectively in the basal forebrain (BF) and cortex and promotes the transition from wakefulness to slow wave sleep (SWS) by inhibiting cholinergic and non-cholinergic wakefulness-promoting BF neurons at the AD A1 receptor. ⋯ Might AD also produce modulation of activity of neurons that have sleep selective transcriptional (Fos) and discharge activity in the preoptic/anterior hypothalamus zone? Whole cell patch clamp recordings in the in vitro horizontal slice showed fast and likely GABAergic inhibitory post-synaptic potentials and currents that were greatly decreased by bath application of AD. Adenosine may thus disinhibit and promote expression of sleep-related neuronal activity in the POAH. In summary, a growing body of evidence supports the role of AD as a mediator of the sleepiness following prolonged wakefulness, a role in which its inhibitory actions on the BF wakefulness-promoting neurons may be especially important.