Differential Fractal and Circadian Patterns in Motor Activity in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats at the Stage of Prehypertension

Author:

Yilmaz Ajda1ORCID,Li Peng23,Kalsbeek Andries145,Buijs Ruud M16,Hu Kun23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience an Institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Amsterdam 1105BA The Netherlands

2. Medical Biodynamics Program Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA 02115 USA

3. Division of Sleep Medicine Department of Medicine Harvard Medical School 221 Longwood Avenue Boston MA 02115 USA

4. Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism Amsterdam UMC University of Amsterdam Amsterdam 1105AZ The Netherlands

5. Laboratory of Endocrinology Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism (AGEM) Amsterdam UMC Amsterdam 1105AZ Netherlands

6. Department of Cell Biology and Physiology Instituto Investigaciones Biomedicas Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Mexico City 04510 Mexico

Abstract

AbstractOne possible pathological mechanism underlying hypertension and its related health consequences is dysfunction of the circadian system—a network of coupled circadian clocks that generates and orchestrates rhythms of ≈24 h in behavior and physiology. To better understand the role of circadian function during the development of hypertension, circadian regulation of motor activity is investigated in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) before the onset of hypertension and in their age‐matched controls—Wistar Kyoto rats (WKYs). Two complementary properties in locomotor activity fluctuations are examined to assessthe multiscale regulatory function of the circadian control network: 1) rhythmicity at ≈24 h and 2) fractal patterns—similar temporal correlation at different time scales (≈0.5–8 h). Compared to WKYs, SHRs have more stable and less fragmented circadian activity rhythms but the changes in the rhythms (e.g., period and amplitude) from constant dark to light conditions are reduced or opposite. SHRs also have altered fractal activity patterns, displaying activity fluctuations with excessive regularity at small timescales that are linked to rigid physiological states. These different rhythmicity/fractal patterns and their different responses to light in SHRs indicate that an altered circadian function may be involved in the development of hypertension.

Funder

Hartstichting

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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