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Summary HUB3006F - Sleep Science - Dale Rae

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This document delves into the science of sleep, exploring the physiology of sleep and circadian rhythms, their importance, and the consequences of sleep deprivation.   It discusses circadian rhythms as endogenously driven 24-hour cycles and their influence on various physiological systems like blood pressure, heart rate, body temperature, melatonin, and growth hormone levels.   The notes further explain the role of the master clock (SCN) and peripheral clocks in controlling circadian rhythms, as well as the impact of factors like light, meal times, and melatonin.   Additionally, the document covers sleep regulation, the sleep homeostat, sleep stages, sleep architecture, and the effects of substances like alcohol and stimulants on sleep.   It also addresses sleep need, sleep debt, sleep timing, sleep continuity disruption, and various sleep abnormalities.   The document concludes by examining how sleep and circadian rhythms change across the lifespan, the impact of sleep and circadian rhythm disruptions on metabolism, obesity, and non-communicable diseases.

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Uploaded on
April 19, 2025
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Written in
2024/2025
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Summary

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Sl#p Science


The physiology of sleep and circadian rhythms
Importance of sleep and circadian rhythms – Why learn about it?
• Sleep is a basic human need and critical for life
• Healthy sleep is tightly coupled to intact circadian rhythms
o If sleep goes wrong ® affects circadian rhythms (and vice versa)
• Healthy sleep + circadian rhythms promote optimal physical and mental health
• Untreated sleep and circadian rhythm disorders exacerbate other medical conditions ® increase
healthcare costs
• Understanding may driver of poor sleep = improve healthcare, sleep-related service provision and
patient outcomes


What is sleep?
• A behavioural state in which we disengage from and are unresponsive to the environment
• Accompanied by postural recumbence (resting), behavioural quiescence and closed eyes
• Controlled by multiple neuronal networks in the brain


Circadian rhythms
• In the field of chronobiology – the study of biological temporal rhythms such as daily, tidal,
weekly, seasonal and annual rhythms
o Period of repetition
• Circadian rhythm – an endogenously driven 24-hour cycle in biochemical, physiological or
behavioural processes
• Chronotype – an expression of your circadian rhythm
o Attribute reflecting one’s preference for mornings or evenings
• When we sleep, our body temperature is at its lowest
• Rises when we want to wake up, then continues to rise throughout the day
• Drops when we want to go back to sleep


Kleitman’s Mammoth Cave experiment
• 4 June to 6 July 1938
• Create an environment removing all external cues to see if physiological rhythm existed
o Does our body continue to produce these rhythms no matter what
o Uniform conditions of temperature, illumination and quiet in the cave
• Found an endogenously generated 24h body temperature cycle
• Sleepiness flowed in contingence with temperature rhythm


Sleep is critical for survival, physical health, mental well-being, cognition, and productivity


Does sleep really matter?
• It is a non-negotiable aspect of survival
• Preserved throughout evolution = therefore conclude it is beneficial to all creatures

,• Physiological correlates of Prolonged Sleep Deprivation in Rats (1983)
• Stimulus presentations were times to reduce sleep severely in experimental rats
• Disc was continuously moving, rats had to keep moving, therefore stayed awake
• Experimental rats suffered severe pathology and death
o Pathology – fluid in lungs and trachea, collapsed lung, stomach ulcers, internal
haemorrhage, severe edema in limbs, atrophied testicles, scrotal damage, enlarged
bladder etc.
o Not only the brain is affected by sleep
• Some systems were more affected by sleep deprivation relative to others
• Time of death ranged from 5 to 33 days


What we know so far


• Reverses performance loss associated with wakefulness
• Enhances neural connections
• Housekeeping function relating to the lymphatic system while we sleep
o Waste removal e.g. Amyloid-beta (relating to Alzheimer’s)
• Immune support – adaptive immunity is more dominant when we are asleep
o Creates antibodies needed to protect against inhaled immune systems
• Restore brain energy stores
• Period of reduced caloric use


Conclusion:
Þ Physical health
Þ Mental health
Þ Emotional resilience
Þ Physical performance
Þ Cognitive performance


Physiology and Measurement of Circadian Rhythms

The basic physiology of circadian rhythms
• Free running rhythm – a sleep disorder in which the intrinsic circadian
rhythm is no longer entrained to the 24-hour cycle
o 24 hours 11 minutes (±16 minutes), just longer than the light-
dark cycle
o Sleep schedule shifts late every day
o No environmental cues

, Endogenously driven
• Master clock = suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of
the hypothalamus
• Interacting network clock genes = PER, CRY,
BMAL1 and REVerb-alpha
• The molecular mechanism of circadian clocks in
mammals is generated by a cell-autonomous
transcriptional autoregulatory feedback loop
o Endogenously driven circadian rhythm



• Activation: CLOCK and BMAL1 form a heterodimer that acts as a TF complex ® binds to Ebox
elements ® promoting transcription of Per1-3 and Cry1, 2
• Repression: Once PER and CRY are translated, they form complexes that translocate back to the
nucleus ® inhibit the activity of CLOCK-BMAL1 complex (negative feedback loop)
• At low enough protein levels, genes are reactivated
• Cycle of protein levels increasing then decreasing = 24 hours


Entrained
• Adjusted to the environment by external cues
• Zeitgebers – a rhythmically occurring natural phenomenon which acts as a cue in the regulation
of the body’s circadian rhythms
o Light – primary external cue
o Meal time
o Locomotor activity
o Chronobiotic drugs e.g. melatonin acts as an entrainer
• Output of internal body clock = circadian rhythm


Criteria for circadian rhythms
1. The rhythms repeat once a day
2. Endogenous – the rhythms persist in the absence of external cues
3. Entrainable – the rhythms can be adjusted to match the local time
4. Temperature compensation – the rhythms maintain circadian periodicity over a range of
physiological temperatures


Parameters of biological rhythms
• Acrophase – the time interval in which the highest levels of
activity are expected (peak)
• Nadir – the time the rhythms troughs
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