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Published Online
on December 29, 2008

Hypertension. 2008
Published online before print December 29, 2008, doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.108.125542
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2009
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Submitted on October 23, 2008
Revised on November 8, 2008

Sleep Modulates Hypertension in Leptin-Deficient Obese Mice

Alessandro Silvani; Stefano Bastianini; Chiara Berteotti; Carlo Franzini; Pierluigi Lenzi; Viviana Lo Martire; and Giovanna Zoccoli*

From the Department of Human and General Physiology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: giovanna.zoccoli{at}unibo.it.

Abstract—Leptin increases sympathetic activity, possibly contributing to hypertension in obese subjects. Hypertension increases cardiovascular mortality, with nighttime (sleep) blood pressure having a substantial prognostic value. We measured blood pressure in male leptin-deficient obese mice (ob/ob; n=7) and their lean wild-type littermates (+/+; n=11) during wakefulness, non–rapid-eye-movement sleep, and rapid-eye-movement sleep to investigate whether, in the absence of leptin, derangements of blood pressure are still associated with obesity and depend on the wake-sleep state. Mice were implanted with a telemetric pressure transducer and electrodes for discriminating wake-sleep states. Mean blood pressure was significantly higher in ob/ob than in +/+ mice during wakefulness (7.3±2.6 mm Hg) and non–rapid-eye-movement sleep (6.7±2.8 mm Hg) but not during rapid-eye-movement sleep (2.6±2.6 mm Hg). In ob/ob and +/+ mice, mean blood pressure was substantially higher during wakefulness than during non–rapid-eye-movement sleep. On passing from non–rapid-eye-movement sleep to rapid-eye-movement sleep, mean blood pressure decreased significantly in ob/ob but not in +/+ mice. The time spent during wakefulness was lower in ob/ob than in +/+ mice during the dark (active) period, whereas the opposite occurred during the light (rest) period. Consequently, mean blood pressure was significantly higher in ob/ob than in +/+ mice during the light (8.2±2.4 mm Hg) but not during the dark (3.0±2.9 mm Hg) period. These data suggest that, in the absence of leptin, obesity may entail hypertensive derangements of blood pressure, which are substantially modulated by the cardiovascular effects of the wake-sleep states.


Key words: arterial pressure • behavior • heart rate • hypertension • obesity • investigative techniques • mice