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INCORPORATION OF PHOSPHATE INTO RAT BRAIN DURING SLEEP AND WAKEFULNESS
Authors:P. Reich    Sharon J.  Geyer   Lola  Steinbaum   M. Anchors   M. L. Karnovsky
Affiliation:Departments of Biological Chemistry and Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, and Department of Medicine, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract— Labelled inorganic phosphate (32P1) was administered intraventricularly to unrestrained sleeping and waking adult rats. After about 20 min of sleep or a comparable period of wakefulness, as monitored by EEG and EMG, the animals were frozen in liquid nitrogen and the brains were analysed. One group of animals (A) was not previously acclimatized to the apparatus. A second group (B) was acclimatized. The specific radioactivity of a phosphoprotein fraction was elevated during sleep in group A but not in group B. The specific radioactivity of the phosphatides of group B was depressed in sleeping as compared with waking animals. This effect was not observed in group A. No significant difference was detected between the EEG patterns of sleeping animals in groups A and B, as evaluated by standard criteria. These observations suggest that the physiological conditions attributable to environmental, emotional or other determinants can influence shifts in brain metabolism during the sleep-wakefulness cycle.
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