Sleep promoting brain cells identified: Study

Scientists have identified a neuron that promotes sleep

author-image
himani gwari
New Update
Sleep promoting brain cells identified: Study

Representative image

A neuron that promotes sleep is identified now, Scientists have identified, an advance type of neuron that can help develop novel drugs to treat sleep disorders. Researchers at John Hopkins University in the USidentified brain cells, located in a part of the hypothalamus called the zona incerta.

These cells could offer novel drug targets to treat sleep disorders, such as insomnia and narcolepsy, caused by the dysfunction of sleep-regulating neurons, they said. The team described neurons that express a gene called Lhx6. Lhx6-expressing cells have not been observed in this area of the brain before and appear to connect the zona Ince RTA to areas of the brain that control sleep and wakefulness, researchers said.

"We know cells in other regions of the brain use Lhx6 and that the gene is vital for these areas to develop properly.For example, disrupting Lhx6 expression can result in many diseases, including severe epilepsy," said Seth Blackshaw, professor at John Hopkins University. Normal sleep has two parts, rapid eye movement (REM) and nonrapid eye movement (non-REM). REM sleep is where most dreaming occurs, while non-REM sleep is understood to be deeper and less active. Both parts are essential for healthy, restful sleep. Researchers used artificial receptors called designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs to increase the activity of Lhx6-expressing neurons in mice and observed their behavior.

They observed that when the neurons were activated, there was an increase in both REM and non-REM sleep for eight hours following treatment.

One population of cells connected to the Lhx6-expressing cells are neurons that are known to secrete hypocretin, a signal that promotes and sustains wakefulness, and which is disrupted in narcolepsy, researchers said. Using drugs that block hypocretin action, they then showed that the increase in non-REM sleep seen following activation of Lhx6-expressing cells was dependent on hypocretin, but that the increase in REM sleep was not. "This shows that Lhx6 inhibits not only hypocretin-producing cells but also other types of wake-promoting cells," said Kai Liu, a graduate student at the Johns Hopkins University School.

The study was published in the journal Nature. 

sleep neurons brain cell