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View Full Version : Brain Molecular Activity Linked to Sleep (I helped with this)


Lady Fury
10-06-2010, 04:43 PM
Link (http://www.sleepfoundation.org/alert/brain-molecular-activity-linked-sleep?utm_source=NSF+Alert&utm_campaign=b80a577221-NSF_Alert_9_22_2010&utm_medium=email)

This was one of the 3 projects I helped work on this summer. It's good to see the paper got done this year.

Washington State University researchers have discovered the mechanism by which the brain switches from a wakeful to a sleeping state. The finding could clear the way for other discoveries that could improve sleep aids and treatment for strokes and other brain injuries.

The researchers documented how ATP (adenosine triphosphate), the fundamental energy currency of cells, is released by active brain cells to start the molecular events leading to sleep. The ATP then binds to a receptor responsible for cell processing and the release of cytokines, small signaling proteins involved in sleep regulation.

By charting the link between ATP and the sleep regulatory substances, the researchers have found the way in which the brain keeps track of activity and ultimately switches from a wakeful to sleeping state. For example, learning and memory depend on changing the connections between brain cells. The study shows that ATP is the signal behind those changes.

We know that brain activity is linked to sleep, but we've never known how," said James Krueger, WSU neuroscientist and lead author of a paper in the latest Journal of Applied Physiology. "This gives us a mechanism to link brain activity to sleep. This has not been done before."

The mechanism - a cascade of chemical transmitters and proteins—opens the door to a more detailed understanding of the sleep process and possible targets for drugs and therapies aimed at the costly, debilitating and dangerous problems of fatigue and sleeplessness.

Dacke
10-06-2010, 05:39 PM
If they could figure out a sleeping pill that basically knocked you out into a natural sleep (instead of actually keeping you asleep for few hours), that would be awesome for those of us with weird schedules.

briusberkley
10-19-2010, 12:55 PM
If they could figure out a sleeping pill that basically knocked you out into a natural sleep (instead of actually keeping you asleep for few hours), that would be awesome for those of us with weird schedules.

I think that would be great to have a sleep aid such as that. It sounds like an interesting study.

Lady Fury
10-19-2010, 03:15 PM
They're working on that. There are things out there that can help to induce natural sleep. Only problem is getting the FDA to approve them. It takes years and sometimes decades to push through new drugs that are based off of hormones and cytokines.