Sleep is not just for the brain: transcriptional responses to sleep in peripheral tissues

View/ Open
Date
2013-05-30Author
Anafi, Ron C.
Pellegrino, Renata [UNIFESP]
Shockley, Keith R.
Romer, Micah
Tufik, Sergio [UNIFESP]
Pack, Allan I.
Type
ArtigoISSN
1471-2164Is part of
Bmc GenomicsDOI
10.1186/1471-2164-14-362Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Many have assumed that the primary function of sleep is for the brain. We evaluated the molecular consequences of sleep and sleep deprivation outside the brain, in heart and lung. Using microarrays we compared gene expression in tissue from sleeping and sleep deprived mice euthanized at the same diurnal times.Results: in each tissue, nearly two thousand genes demonstrated statistically significant differential expression as a function of sleep/wake behavioral state. To mitigate the influence of an artificial deprivation protocol, we identified a subset of these transcripts as specifically sleep-enhanced or sleep-repressed by requiring that their expression also change over the course of unperturbed sleep. 3% and 6% of the assayed transcripts showed sleep specific changes in the lung and heart respectively. Sleep specific transcripts in these tissues demonstrated highly significant overlap and shared temporal dynamics. Markers of cellular stress and the unfolded protein response were reduced during sleep in both tissues. These results mirror previous findings in brain. Sleep-enhanced pathways reflected the unique metabolic functions of each tissue. Transcripts related to carbohydrate and sulfur metabolic processes were enhanced by sleep in the lung, and collectively favor buffering from oxidative stress. DNA repair and protein metabolism annotations were significantly enriched among the sleep-enhanced transcripts in the heart. Our results also suggest that sleep may provide a Zeitgeber, or synchronizing cue, in the lung as a large cluster of transcripts demonstrated systematic changes in inter-animal variability as a function of both sleep duration and circadian time.Conclusion: Our data support the notion that the molecular consequences of sleep/wake behavioral state extend beyond the brain to include peripheral tissues. Sleep state induces a highly overlapping response in both heart and lung. We conclude that sleep enhances organ specific molecular functions and that it has a ubiquitous role in reducing cellular metabolic stress in both brain and peripheral tissues. Finally, our data suggest a novel role for sleep in synchronizing transcription in peripheral tissues.
Citation
Bmc Genomics. London: Biomed Central Ltd, v. 14, 19 p., 2013.Keywords
SleepCircadian Rhythms
Sleep Deprivation
Unfolded Protein Response
Heart
Lung
Synchronization
Sponsorship
Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Environmental Health SciencesNational Institutes of Health
American Sleep Medicine Foundation
National Heart Lung Blood Institute
Collections
- EPM - Artigos [17708]