ILANIT 2023

Temperature-robust REM and SWS sleep states in reptiles

Nitzan Albeck 1,2 Daniel Udi 1 Regev Eyal 1,2 Arik Shvartsman 1 Mark Shein-Idelson 1,2
1Neurobiology, Biochemistry and Biophysics, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
2Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Israel

During sleep our brain switches between two starkly different brain states - slow wave sleep (SWS) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. While this two-state sleep pattern is abundant across birds and mammals, its existence in other vertebrates is not universally accepted, its evolutionary emergence is unclear and it is undetermined whether it is a fundamental property of vertebrate brains or an adaptation specific to homeotherms. To address these questions, we conducted electrophysiological recordings in the Agamid lizard, Laudakia vulgaris during sleep. We found clear signatures of two-state sleep that resemble the mammalian and avian sleep patterns. Interestingly, in contrast to the high temperature sensitivity of mammalian states, state switches were robust to large variations in temperature (Q10 of 2.3). We also found that breathing rate, eye movements and head micro-movements were locked to the REM state as they are in mammals. Collectively, these findings suggest that two-state sleep is abundant across the agamid family, shares physiological similarity to mammalian sleep, and can be maintain in poikilothems, increasing the probability that it existed in the cold-blooded ancestor of amniotes.