Effects of insufficient sleep on circadian rhythmicity and expression amplitude of the human blood transcriptome

被引:369
作者
Moller-Levet, Carla S. [1 ]
Archer, Simon N. [1 ]
Bucca, Giselda [1 ]
Laing, Emma E. [1 ]
Slak, Ana [1 ]
Kabiljo, Renata [1 ]
Lo, June C. Y. [1 ]
Santhi, Nayantara [1 ]
von Schantz, Malcolm [1 ]
Smith, Colin P. [1 ]
Dijk, Derk-Jan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Surrey, Fac Hlth & Med Sci, Guildford GU2 7XH, Surrey, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
bloodomics; chronobiology; leukocyte; genomics; BRAIN GENE-EXPRESSION; EPIDEMIOLOGIC EVIDENCE; IMMUNE FUNCTION; MESSENGER-RNA; DURATION; TIME; METABOLISM; WAKEFULNESS; RESTRICTION; DEPRIVATION;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1217154110
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Insufficient sleep and circadian rhythm disruption are associated with negative health outcomes, including obesity, cardiovascular disease, and cognitive impairment, but the mechanisms involved remain largely unexplored. Twenty-six participants were exposed to 1 wk of insufficient sleep (sleep-restriction condition 5.70 h, SEM = 0.03 sleep per 24 h) and 1 wk of sufficient sleep (control condition 8.50 h sleep, SEM = 0.11). Immediately following each condition, 10 whole-blood RNA samples were collected from each participant, while controlling for the effects of light, activity, and food, during a period of total sleep deprivation. Transcriptome analysis revealed that 711 genes were up- or down-regulated by insufficient sleep. Insufficient sleep also reduced the number of genes with a circadian expression profile from 1,855 to 1,481, reduced the circadian amplitude of these genes, and led to an increase in the number of genes that responded to subsequent total sleep deprivation from 122 to 856. Genes affected by insufficient sleep were associated with circadian rhythms (PER1, PER2, PER3, CRY2, CLOCK, NR1D1, NR1D2, RORA, DEC1, CSNK1E), sleep homeostasis (IL6, STAT3, KCNV2, CAMK2D), oxidative stress (PRDX2, PRDX5), and metabolism (SLC2A3, SLC2A5, GHRL, ABCA1). Biological processes affected included chromatin modification, gene-expression regulation, macromolecular metabolism, and inflammatory, immune and stress responses. Thus, insufficient sleep affects the human blood transcriptome, disrupts its circadian regulation, and intensifies the effects of acute total sleep deprivation. The identified biological processes may be involved with the negative effects of sleep loss on health, and highlight the interrelatedness of sleep homeostasis, circadian rhythmicity, and metabolism.
引用
收藏
页码:E1132 / E1141
页数:10
相关论文
共 66 条
  • [1] Noninvasive method for assessing the human circadian clock using hair follicle cells
    Akashi, Makoto
    Soma, Haruhiko
    Yamamoto, Takuro
    Tsugitomi, Asuka
    Yamashita, Shiko
    Yamamoto, Takuya
    Nishida, Eisuke
    Yasuda, Akio
    Liao, James K.
    Node, Koichi
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2010, 107 (35) : 15643 - 15648
  • [2] SUBJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE SLEEPINESS IN THE ACTIVE INDIVIDUAL
    AKERSTEDT, T
    GILLBERG, M
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1990, 52 (1-2) : 29 - 37
  • [3] Relationships between circadian rhythms and modulation of gene expression by glucocorticoids in skeletal muscle
    Almon, Richard R.
    Yang, Eric
    Lai, William
    Androulakis, Ioannis P.
    Ghimbovschi, Svetlana
    Hoffman, Eric P.
    Jusko, William J.
    DuBois, Debra C.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-REGULATORY INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 2008, 295 (04) : R1031 - R1047
  • [4] Inter-individual differences in habitual sleep timing and entrained phase of endogenous circadian rhythms of BMAL1, PER2 and PER3 mRNA in human leukocytes
    Archer, Simon N.
    Viola, Antoine U.
    Kyriakopoulou, Vanessa
    von Schantz, Malcolm
    Dijk, Derk-Jan
    [J]. SLEEP, 2008, 31 (05) : 608 - 617
  • [5] STUDY DESIGNS Studying and modelling dynamic biological processes using time-series gene expression data
    Bar-Joseph, Ziv
    Gitter, Anthony
    Simon, Itamar
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS, 2012, 13 (08) : 552 - 564
  • [6] Circadian Desynchrony Promotes Metabolic Disruption in a Mouse Model of Shiftwork
    Barclay, Johanna L.
    Husse, Jana
    Bode, Brid
    Naujokat, Nadine
    Meyer-Kovac, Judit
    Schmid, Sebastian M.
    Lehnert, Hendrik
    Oster, Henrik
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (05):
  • [7] Maximizing Sensitivity of the Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT) to Sleep Loss
    Basner, Mathias
    Dinges, David F.
    [J]. SLEEP, 2011, 34 (05) : 581 - 591
  • [8] Circadian topology of metabolism
    Bass, Joseph
    [J]. NATURE, 2012, 491 (7424) : 348 - 356
  • [9] CONTROLLING THE FALSE DISCOVERY RATE - A PRACTICAL AND POWERFUL APPROACH TO MULTIPLE TESTING
    BENJAMINI, Y
    HOCHBERG, Y
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES B-STATISTICAL METHODOLOGY, 1995, 57 (01) : 289 - 300
  • [10] Sleep and immune function
    Besedovsky, Luciana
    Lange, Tanja
    Born, Jan
    [J]. PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 463 (01): : 121 - 137