Identification of a pharmacological target for genioglossus reactivation throughout sleep

KP Grace, SW Hughes, RL Horner - Sleep, 2014 - academic.oup.com
KP Grace, SW Hughes, RL Horner
Sleep, 2014academic.oup.com
Abstract Study Objectives: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a significant public health
problem caused by repeated episodes of upper airway closure that occur only during sleep.
Attempts to treat OSA pharmacologically have been unsuccessful because there has not
been identification of a target operating at cranial motor nuclei, blockade of which can
reactivate pharyngeal muscle activity throughout sleep. Increasing potassium conductance
is a common mechanism by which state-dependent neuromodulators reduce motoneuron …
Study Objectives
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a significant public health problem caused by repeated episodes of upper airway closure that occur only during sleep. Attempts to treat OSA pharmacologically have been unsuccessful because there has not been identification of a target operating at cranial motor nuclei, blockade of which can reactivate pharyngeal muscle activity throughout sleep. Increasing potassium conductance is a common mechanism by which state-dependent neuromodulators reduce motoneuron excitability. Therefore, we aimed to determine if potassium channel blockade is an effective strategy to reactivate the pharyngeal musculature throughout sleep.
Design, Participants, and Interventions
In rats chronically instrumented for recording sleep-wake states and respiratory motor activities, we locally microperfused pharmacological agents into the hypoglossal motor pool to modulate potassium channels of three major classes: inwardly rectifying, two-pore domain, and voltage-gated.
Measurements and Results
Microperfusion of the inwardly rectifying potassium channel blocker, barium, as well as the voltage-gated potassium channel blockers, tetraethylammonium and 4-aminopyridine, increased tonic and respiratory-related genioglossus activities throughout nonrapid eye movement (non-REM) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep to 133–300% of levels present during baseline wakefulness. In contrast, microperfusion of methanandamide (TWIK-related acid-sensitive potassium [TASK] channel blocker/cannabinoid receptor agonist) activated genioglossus in wakefulness but not in sleep.
Conclusions
These findings establish proof-of-principle that targeted blockade of certain potassium channels at the hypoglossal motor pool is an effective strategy for reversing upper airway hypotonia and causing sustained reactivation of genioglossus throughout nonrapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep. These findings identify an important new direction for translational approaches to the pharmacological treatment of obstructive sleep apnea.
Oxford University Press