[1] Peng Y, Wang W, Tan T, et al. Maternal sleep deprivation at different stages of pregnancy impairs the emotional and cognitive functions, and suppresses hippocampal long-term potentiation in the offspring rats[J]. Mol Brain, 2016, 9: 17. [2] Ashton JE, Harrington MO, Langthorne D, et al. Sleep deprivation induces fragmented memory loss[J]. Learn Mem, 2020, 27 (4): 130-135. [3] Wadhwa M, Prabhakar A, Ray K, et al. Inhibiting the microglia activation improves the spatial memory and adult neurogenesis in rat hippocampus during 48 h of sleep deprivation[J]. J Neuroinflamm, 2017, 14 (1): 222. [4] Anacker C, Luna VM, Stevens GS, et al. Hippocampal neurogenesis confers stress resilience by inhibiting the ventral dentate gyrus[J]. Nature, 2018, 559 (7712): 98-102. [5] Kesner RP. An analysis of dentate gyrus function (an update)[J]. Behav Brain Res, 2018, 354: 84-91. [6] Süer C, Dolu N, Artis AS, et al. The effects of long-term sleep deprivation on the long-term potentiation in the dentate gyrus and brain oxidation status in rats[J]. Neurosci Res, 2011, 70 (1): 71-77. [7] Hagena H, Hansen N, Manahan-Vaughan D. β-adrenergic control of hippocampal function: Subserving the choreography of synaptic information storage and memory[J]. Cereb Cortex, 2016, 26 (4): 1349-1364. [8] Milner TA, Shah P, Pierce JP. beta-adrenergic receptors primarily are located on the dendrites of granule cells and interneurons but also are found on astrocytes and a few presynaptic profiles in the rat dentate gyrus[J]. Synapse, 2000, 36 (3): 178-193. [9] Wang FX, Tang RQ, Lv J, et al. Norepinephrine in the dentate gyrus is involved in spatial learning and memory alteration induced by chronic restraint stress in aged rats[J]. Neuroreport, 2020, 31 (18): 1308-1314. [10] Hansen N, Manahan-Vaughan D. Hippocampal long-term potentiation that is elicited by perforant path stimulation or that occurs in conjunction with spatial learning is tightly controlled by beta-adrenoreceptors and the locus coeruleus[J]. Hippocampus, 2015, 25 (11): 1285-1298. [11] Lv J, Feng H, Chen L, et al. Activation of β-adrenoceptor facilitates active avoidance learning through enhancement of glutamate levels in the hippocampal dentate gyrus[J]. Neuroreport, 2017, 28 (15): 973-979. [12] Saygin M, Ozguner MF, Onder O, et al. The impact of sleep deprivation on hippocampal-mediated learning and memory in rats[J]. Bratisl Lek Listy, 2017, 118 (7): 408-416. [13] Gray R, Johnston D. Noradrenaline and beta-adrenoceptor agonists increase activity of voltage-dependent calcium channels in hippocampal neurons[J]. Nature, 1987, 327 (6123): 620-622. [14] Hitier M, Sato G, Zhang YF, et al. Effects of electrical stimulation of the rat vestibular labyrinth on c-Fos expression in the hippocampus[J]. Neurosci Lett, 2018, 677: 60-64. [15] Jaworski J, Kalita K, Knapska E. c-Fos and neuronal plasticity: the aftermath of Kaczmarek's theory[J]. Acta Neurobiol Exp, 2018, 78 (4): 287-296. [16] Bernstein HL, Lu YL, Botterill JJ, et al. Novelty and novel objects increase c-Fos immunoreactivity in mossy cells in the mouse dentate gyrus[J]. Neural Plast, 2019, 2019: 1815371. [17] Leal G, Bramham CR, Duarte CB. BDNF and hippocampal synaptic plasticity[J]. Vitam Horm, 2017, 104: 153-195. [18] Mello-Carpes PB, da Silva de Vargas L, Gayer MC, et al. Hippocampal noradrenergic activation is necessary for object recognition memory consolidation and can promote BDNF increase and memory persistence[J]. Neurobiol Learn Mem 2016, 127: 84-92. [19] Ortiz JB, Mathewson CM, Hoffman AN, et al. Hippocampal brain-derived neurotrophic factor mediates recovery from chronic stress-induced spatial reference memory deficits[J]. Eur J Neurosci, 2014, 40 (9): 3351-3362. |