(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON — Researchers have a better understanding of sleep disruption — particularly in the realm of sex-specific differences and cellular dysfunction — and are developing new research to study the interplay between sleep and memory. The findings will be presented on Tuesday, November 14, 10–11 a.m. EST at Neuroscience 2023, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience and the world’s largest source of emerging news about brain science and health.
Approximately one out of every three adults in the United States report not getting enough sleep. Despite years of research into sleep and memory, neuroscientists still do not fully understand the exact causes and mechanisms of sleep disorders. Ongoing research aims to uncover these causes and advance more effective treatments.
New findings show that:
Hormonal changes in female mice provide some resilience to acute sleep deprivation, compared with male mice. (Lisa Lyons, Florida State University)
In female rodents, astrocytes play a crucial role in mediating estrogen’s effects on sleep, adding evidence to estrogen’s role in sleep regulation. (Jessica Mong, University of Maryland)
Young adult mice exhibit degraded markers of memory and cell health when exposed to sleep disruption — suggesting that problems with how cells manage proteins (i.e., proteostasis) precede a decline in memory. (Nirinjini Naidoo, University of Pennsylvania)
Cuttlefish skin pattern displays change during sleep following social interactions; this work contributes to understanding the interplay between sleep and memory. (Horst Obenhaus, Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience)
“Why we sleep remains one of the major enigmas of neuroscience,” said Robert Greene, professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and moderator of the press conference. “Recent neuroscience research is beginning to uncover some of these secrets, including understanding the price of sleep loss on brain function. Further studies show the surprisingly gender-specific gateway to sleep in females and female resilience to sleep loss when sleep is curtailed. Finally, pioneering research on dream sleep may take a step forward with cephalopods, like cuttlefish, that wear their dreams on their skin, potentially providing a unique window into their dream content.”
This research was supported by national funding agencies including the National Institutes of Health and private funding organizations. Find out more about sleep and the brain on BrainFacts.org.
Tuesday, November 14, 2023
10–11 a.m. EST
Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Room 202B
Press Conference Summary
Three of these presentations focus on sleep disruption in rodents. Two presentations highlight sex-specific differences, specifically in females. The other rodent study analyzes restricted sleep and cellular changes in the brain. The last presentation offers a new model for study (the cuttlefish) and offers preliminary findings from that exploration.
Acute sleep deprivation results in sex-specific differences in gene regulation
Lisa Lyons, lyons@bio.fsu.edu, Abstract PSTR557.05
Even though it’s now understood that there are sex-specific behavioral differences in acute sleep deprivation, most molecular studies have included male animals only.
Researchers studied changes in gene expression following acute sleep deprivation in female mice and found that female mice were more resilient to changes in gene expression than male mice.
Researchers found changes in gene expression for 99 genes in female mice (but female mice had virtually no differences in proestrus stages) compared with more than 1,100 gene expression changes in male mice.
The role of median preoptic nucleus astrocytes in estradiol’s modulation of sleep
Jessica Mong, jmong@som.umaryland.edu, Abstract PSTR557.18
In women, ovarian hormone changes have been highly associated with increases in sleep disruption, yet little is understood about how ovarian hormones, like estrogens, affect sleep.
When researchers inhibited astrocytes in the preoptic area of the brain (an area involved in sleep regulation) in female rats, they found that estrogen no longer regulated sleep patterns conversely, when these cells where excited estrogen-like effects on sleep were mimicked
These findings suggest that astrocytes may play a major role in mediating estrogen’s effects on sleep.
Sleeping less, learning less: The lasting effects of restricted sleep on cognitive performance and neuronal health in young mice
Nirinjini Naidoo, naidoo@mail.med.upenn.edu, Abstract NANO67.02
Researchers showed that chronic short sleep (CSS) exposure (three days a week over eight weeks) in young mice led to worse performance on learning tasks.
Molecules related to memory and cell health (e.g., BiP, BDNF, p-CREB) were also affected, leading to adaptive endoplasmic reticulum stress response in the brain.
These findings suggest that disrupted proteostasis (protein regulation within the cell) leads to cognitive decline.
Modulation of active sleep following salient social encounters in the cuttlefish Sepia bandensis
Horst Obenhaus, horst.obenhaus@ntnu.no, Abstract PSTR095.10
Like humans, cuttlefish exhibit complex brain function, including memory, social cognition, and signatures of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Researchers hypothesize that skin patterns observed during active sleep indicate signs of reactivations of prior social encounters, similar to “replay” in vertebrates’ brains.
Cuttlefish were exposed to social interactions and then observed in sleep. The cuttlefish displayed rapidly changing skin patterns that varied from baseline, which researchers hypothesize are the cuttlefish replaying the social interactions as they sleep. Scientists are now exploring how cuttlefish use these displays, how these observed variations differ, and what this can tell us about our own brains.
###
The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) is an organization of nearly 35,000 basic scientists and clinicians who study the brain and the nervous system.
END
For immediate release on Nov. 11, 2023 at 10:10 a.m. E.T.
A National Institutes of Health-supported study found that the type of transfusion approach used to support adults who developed anemia after a heart attack did not make a significant difference in their likelihood of having another heart attack or dying within 30 days. Participants in the trial were randomized to receive a red blood cell transfusion when their red blood cell counts were in a prespecified range of moderate anemia, which is considered a liberal approach, or when it was more severe, ...
An international clinical trial led by physician Jeffrey L. Carson, distinguished professor of medicine at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, found that a liberal blood transfusion given to patients who have had a heart attack and have anemia may reduce the risk of a reoccurrence and improve survival rates. The results of the trial, Myocardium Infarction and Transfusion (MINT), were published today in the New England Journal of Medicine. Maria Mori Brooks, professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health, co-first authored the study.
“Transfusion threshold trials are important to help physicians inform decisions that provide ...
About The Study: This secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial validated a natural language processing model developed within a single healthcare system to identify heart failure hospitalizations. Further study is needed to determine whether natural language processing will improve the efficiency of future multicenter clinical trials by identifying clinical events at scale.
Authors: Scott D. Solomon, M.D., of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: ...
Cleveland: Findings from a multi-center, international clinical trial reported by a Cleveland Clinic physician show that semaglutide reduced cardiovascular events by 20% in adults with overweight or obesity and established cardiovascular disease who do not have diabetes.
Semaglutide is primarily prescribed for adults with type 2 diabetes but is also approved for chronic weight management in adults with obesity or overweight and have at least one other health issue. In the trial, patients treated with semaglutide lost an average of 9.4% of their body weight and experienced improvements in other risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
Results ...
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have identified key factors in the mechanism behind DNA repair in our bodies. For the first time, they showed that the “proofreading” portion of the DNA replicating enzyme polymerase epsilon ensured safe termination of replication at damaged portions of the DNA strand, ultimately saving DNA from severe damage. This new knowledge arms scientists with ways to make anti-cancer drugs more effective, and new diagnostic methods.
Our DNA is under attack. Every day, around 55,000 single-strand breaks (SSBs) appear in the strands making up DNA helices ...
MSU has a satellite uplink/LTN TV studio and Comrex line for radio interviews upon request.
There is a general understanding that pets have a positive impact on one’s well-being. A new study by Michigan State University found that although pet owners reported pets improving their lives, there was not a reliable association between pet ownership and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study, published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, assessed 767 people over three times in May 2020. The researchers took a mixed-method ...
MSU has a satellite uplink/LTN TV studio and Comrex line for radio interviews upon request.
A new study, conducted in collaboration between researchers at Michigan State University and Central Michigan University, found that public spending on social safety net programs and on education spending each independently impact high school graduation rates, which are a key predictor of health and well-being later in life.
The study, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health, tested whether public financing for education and social safety net programs that aim to help ...
MSU has a satellite uplink/LTN TV studio and Comrex line for radio interviews upon request.
Video and Images
Michigan State University researchers have solved the mystery of a poorly understood sperm structure called the cytoplasmic droplet, or CD. The CD is an expanded cytoplasm — watery, gel-like cell contents enclosed by cell membrane — found close to the head, at the neck of the sperm, in all mammals, including humans. This new genetic model is the first of its kind.
Despite ...
With Amazon aiming to make 10,000 deliveries with drones in Europe this year and Walmart planning to expand its drone delivery services to an additional 60,000 homes this year in the states, companies are investing more research and development funding into drone delivery, But are consumers ready to accept this change as the new normal?
Northwestern University’s Mobility and Behavior Lab, led by Amanda Stathopoulos, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, wanted to know if consumers were ready for robots to replace delivery drivers, in the form ...
Minneapolis, Minn. – In a recently released study, researchers at Hennepin Healthcare and other Minnesota health systems describe how a COVID-19 collaboration across Minnesota health systems was adapted to monitor near-real-time trends in substance use–related hospital and emergency department (ED) visits.
The Minnesota Electronic Health Record Consortium (MNEHRC), developed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, repurposed its surveillance methods to identify health disparities and inform equity-driven approaches to the overdose epidemic.
MNEHRC’s study, "Minnesota Data Sharing May Be Model for Near-Real-Time Tracking of Drug Overdose Hospital ...