PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Billeh, Yazan N. AU - Rodriguez, Alexander V. AU - Bellesi, Michele AU - Bernard, Amy AU - de Vivo, Luisa AU - Funk, Chadd M. AU - Harris, Julie AU - Honjoh, Sakiko AU - Mihalas, Stefan AU - Ng, Lydia AU - Koch, Christof AU - Cirelli, Chiara AU - Tononi, Giulio TI - Effects of Chronic Sleep Restriction during Early Adolescence on the Adult Pattern of Connectivity of Mouse Secondary Motor Cortex AID - 10.1523/ENEURO.0053-16.2016 DP - 2016 Mar 01 TA - eneuro PG - ENEURO.0053-16.2016 VI - 3 IP - 2 4099 - http://www.eneuro.org/content/3/2/ENEURO.0053-16.2016.short 4100 - http://www.eneuro.org/content/3/2/ENEURO.0053-16.2016.full SO - eNeuro2016 Mar 01; 3 AB - Cortical circuits mature in stages, from early synaptogenesis and synaptic pruning to late synaptic refinement, resulting in the adult anatomical connection matrix. Because the mature matrix is largely fixed, genetic or environmental factors interfering with its establishment can have irreversible effects. Sleep disruption is rarely considered among those factors, and previous studies have focused on very young animals and the acute effects of sleep deprivation on neuronal morphology and cortical plasticity. Adolescence is a sensitive time for brain remodeling, yet whether chronic sleep restriction (CSR) during adolescence has long-term effects on brain connectivity remains unclear. We used viral-mediated axonal labeling and serial two-photon tomography to measure brain-wide projections from secondary motor cortex (MOs), a high-order area with diffuse projections. For each MOs target, we calculated the projection fraction, a combined measure of passing fibers and axonal terminals normalized for the size of each target. We found no homogeneous differences in MOs projection fraction between mice subjected to 5 days of CSR during early adolescence (P25–P30, ≥50% decrease in daily sleep, n=14) and siblings that slept undisturbed (n=14). Machine learning algorithms, however, classified animals at significantly above chance levels, indicating that differences between the two groups exist, but are subtle and heterogeneous. Thus, sleep disruption in early adolescence may affect adult brain connectivity. However, because our method relies on a global measure of projection density and was not previously used to measure connectivity changes due to behavioral manipulations, definitive conclusions on the long-term structural effects of early CSR require additional experiments.