| Literature DB >> 19360106 |
Christopher J Winrow1, Deanna L Williams, Andrew Kasarskis, Joshua Millstein, Aaron D Laposky, He S Yang, Karrie Mrazek, Lili Zhou, Joseph R Owens, Daniel Radzicki, Fabian Preuss, Eric E Schadt, Kazuhiro Shimomura, Martha H Vitaterna, Chunsheng Zhang, Kenneth S Koblan, John J Renger, Fred W Turek.
Abstract
Despite decades of research in defining sleep-wake properties in mammals, little is known about the nature or identity of genes that regulate sleep, a fundamental behaviour that in humans occupies about one-third of the entire lifespan. While genome-wide association studies in humans and quantitative trait loci (QTL) analyses in mice have identified candidate genes for an increasing number of complex traits and genetic diseases, the resources and time-consuming process necessary for obtaining detailed quantitative data have made sleep seemingly intractable to similar large-scale genomic approaches. Here we describe analysis of 20 sleep-wake traits from 269 mice from a genetically segregating population that reveals 52 significant QTL representing a minimum of 20 genomic loci. While many (28) QTL affected a particular sleep-wake trait (e.g., amount of wake) across the full 24-hr day, other loci only affected a trait in the light or dark period while some loci had opposite effects on the trait during the light vs. dark. Analysis of a dataset for multiple sleep-wake traits led to previously undetected interactions (including the differential genetic control of number and duration of REM bouts), as well as possible shared genetic regulatory mechanisms for seemingly different unrelated sleep-wake traits (e.g., number of arousals and REM latency). Construction of a Bayesian network for sleep-wake traits and loci led to the identification of sub-networks of linkage not detectable in smaller data sets or limited single-trait analyses. For example, the network analyses revealed a novel chain of causal relationships between the chromosome 17@29cM QTL, total amount of wake, and duration of wake bouts in both light and dark periods that implies a mechanism whereby overall sleep need, mediated by this locus, in turn determines the length of each wake bout. Taken together, the present results reveal a complex genetic landscape underlying multiple sleep-wake traits and emphasize the need for a systems biology approach for elucidating the full extent of the genetic regulatory mechanisms of this complex and universal behavior.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19360106 PMCID: PMC2664962 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Factor Analysis of Sleep-Wake Traits.
| Trait | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | Factor 4 | Factor 5 |
| Fragmentation | REM Sleep | State Amount | Power Bands | Latency | |
| nb Wake |
| −0.20 | 0.03 | 0.26 | −0.04 |
| db Wake |
| 0.22 | −0.31 | −0.23 | 0.09 |
| nb NREM |
| −0.07 | 0.19 | −0.02 | −0.08 |
| db NREM |
| 0.13 | 0.22 | 0.02 | 0.09 |
| db TS |
| 0.08 | 0.19 | 0.03 | 0.10 |
| # Arousals |
| 0.13 | 0.27 | −0.30 | −0.08 |
| # Shifts |
| −0.13 | 0.19 | −0.02 | −0.09 |
| Onset REM |
| 0.16 | 0.33 | 0.04 | 0.11 |
| REM min | −0.17 |
| −0.02 | 0.08 | 0.02 |
| % REM/TS | −0.14 |
| −0.43 | 0.10 | 0.05 |
| nb REM | −0.21 |
| 0.05 | 0.00 | −0.21 |
| Inter REM | 0.03 |
| −0.09 | 0.05 | 0.19 |
| Wake min | 0.06 | 0.04 |
| 0.05 | 0.08 |
| NREM min | −0.03 | 0.12 |
| −0.06 | −0.09 |
| NREM rel Delta | 0.03 | −0.02 | 0.01 |
| 0.03 |
| REM rel Theta I | 0.14 | 0.10 | 0.02 |
| 0.00 |
| REM rel Theta II | −0.07 | −0.06 | 0.07 |
| 0.02 |
| lat NREM | 0.18 | −0.07 | −0.01 | −0.14 |
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| lat REM | 0.10 | 0.18 | −0.02 | −0.02 |
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| db REM | 0.04 | 0.14 | −0.11 | 0.15 | 0.39 |
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Factor loadings (Statistica, StatSoft, Inc.) of the 20 sleep-wake variables in the 24-hr period are shown with the factor-determining loading values bolded (generally greater than ±0.75). The 5 factors account for 81 percent of the total variance in the data. See Supporting Information for complete trait descriptions, and Supporting Information Table S2 for a 1000× bootstrap-obtained estimate of the 95% confidence intervals of the factor loading values.
Figure 152 QTL for 20 sleep-wake traits.
52 QTL shown by chromosome and cM positions that were identified for each of the sleep-wake traits listed in Table 1. The colored bands represent the position of the peak LOD score for each QTL and the fill of the bands denote the time period for the trait linkage as shown in the insert legend. Based on the factor analysis depicted in Table 1, the traits are grouped into 1 of 5 categories designated by the color of the bands as noted in the insert legend. The precise peak (in cM and Mb) and LOD score of the QTL, as well as the specific sleep-wake trait represented by each of the colored bands, are provided in Table 2. Further information on the size of the QTL are provided in Supporting Information Table S3.
Peak Location and LOD Score of Each QTL Depicted in Figure 1.
| Name | Trait | Trait_Type | Chr | Peak (cM) | Peak (Mb) | LOD | FDR | Period |
| Q1@39 | Onset REM | Fragmentation | 1 | 38.470 | 109.044 | 4.445 | .006 | 24 hour |
| Q1@39 | db TS | Fragmentation | 1 | 39.120 | 115.677 | 3.453 | .034 | 24 hour |
| Q1@39 | db NREM | Fragmentation | 1 | 39.120 | 115.677 | 3.438 | .034 | 24 hour |
| Q1@39 | nb NREM | Fragmentation | 1 | 42.400 | 133.902 | 3.485 | .026 | 24 hour |
| Q1@39 | # Shifts | Fragmentation | 1 | 42.400 | 133.902 | 3.076 | .033 | 24 hour |
| Q1@64 | # Arousals | Fragmentation | 1 | 62.230 | 172.886 | 4.231 | .004 | 24 hour |
| Q1@64 | lat REM | Latency | 1 | 62.230 | 172.886 | 2.941 | .046 | 24 hour |
| Q1@64 | db Wake | Fragmentation | 1 | 62.230 | 172.886 | 3.991 | .019 | Dark |
| Q1@64 | nb Wake | Fragmentation | 1 | 63.680 | 176.451 | 3.285 | .018 | Dark |
| Q1@64 | REM rel Theta I | Power Bands | 1 | 63.680 | 176.451 | 2.790 | .040 | Mixed |
| Q1@75 | lat NREM | Latency | 1 | 74.200 | 187.588 | 4.528 | .001 | 24 hour |
| Q1@75 | db TS | Fragmentation | 1 | 74.200 | 187.588 | 3.252 | .023 | Dark |
| Q1@75 | lat NREM | Latency | 1 | 74.200 | 187.588 | 2.796 | .019 | Dark |
| Q1@75 | NREM rel Delta | Power Bands | 1 | 74.200 | 187.588 | 3.097 | .044 | Mixed |
| Q1@75 | Onset REM | Fragmentation | 1 | 74.580 | 188.870 | 3.475 | .009 | Dark |
| Q1@75 | db NREM | Fragmentation | 1 | 76.960 | 189.312 | 3.176 | .027 | Dark |
| Q1@75 | # Arousals | Fragmentation | 1 | 76.960 | 189.312 | 2.493 | .041 | Dark |
| Q3@12 | NREM rel Delta | Power Bands | 3 | 12.180 | 30.690 | 2.745 | .042 | Mixed |
| Q3@71 | lat NREM | Latency | 3 | 71.060 | 146.067 | 3.244 | .027 | 24 hour |
| Q5@49 | % REM/TS | REM | 5 | 45.290 | 65.322 | 4.225 | .008 | 24 hour |
| Q5@49 | db REM | REM | 5 | 49.320 | 70.388 | 6.339 | .001 | 24 hour |
| Q5@49 | REM | REM | 5 | 51.940 | 73.499 | 4.224 | .005 | 24 hour |
| Q6@70 | # Shifts | Fragmentation | 6 | 70.000 | 135.767 | 3.111 | .040 | 24 hour |
| Q6@70 | nb NREM | Fragmentation | 6 | 70.000 | 135.767 | 3.079 | .033 | 24 hour |
| Q6@70 | db Wake | Fragmentation | 6 | 70.000 | 135.767 | 3.666 | .024 | 24 hour |
| Q7@1 | db Wake | Fragmentation | 7 | 0.980 | 7.882 | 3.113 | .045 | 24 hour |
| Q7@1 | nb Wake | Fragmentation | 7 | 0.980 | 7.882 | 4.064 | .012 | 24 hour |
| Q7@32 | nb REM | REM | 7 | 31.770 | 50.217 | 4.288 | .002 | Mixed |
| Q7@40 | REM min | REM | 7 | 40.200 | 67.412 | 3.608 | .004 | Light |
| Q7@63 | Inter REM | REM | 7 | 59.900 | 102.969 | 4.014 | .046 | Mixed |
| Q7@63 | Wake min | State Length | 7 | 62.850 | 114.066 | 4.812 | .022 | Mixed |
| Q7@63 | NREM min | State Length | 7 | 65.140 | 114.924 | 4.443 | .027 | Light |
| Q9@15 | lat NREM | Latency | 9 | 15.160 | 46.527 | 3.062 | .026 | 24 hour |
| Q12@28 | db TS | Fragmentation | 12 | 27.580 | 71.050 | 3.111 | .035 | 24 hour |
| Q12@28 | db NREM | Fragmentation | 12 | 27.580 | 71.050 | 3.119 | .036 | 24 hour |
| Q13@2 | # Arousals | Fragmentation | 13 | 0.000 | 4.692 | 2.536 | .049 | Light |
| Q13@2 | lat REM | Latency | 13 | 1.640 | 14.548 | 2.829 | .042 | 24 hour |
| Q13@2 | Wake min | State Length | 13 | 1.970 | 16.724 | 5.139 | .001 | 24 hour |
| Q13@2 | NREM min | State Length | 13 | 1.970 | 16.724 | 3.593 | .049 | 24 hour |
| Q13@23 | db REM | REM | 13 | 20.030 | 60.142 | 3.299 | .026 | 24 hour |
| Q13@23 | REM min | REM | 13 | 22.660 | 68.690 | 6.302 | <.001 | 24 hour |
| Q13@23 | % REM/TS | REM | 13 | 22.660 | 68.690 | 6.473 | <.001 | 24 hour |
| Q13@23 | Inter REM | REM | 13 | 25.940 | 72.819 | 3.928 | .012 | 24 hour |
| Q14@73 | lat REM | Latency | 14 | 72.980 | 121.782 | 3.058 | .046 | 24 hour |
| Q15@26 | % REM/TS | REM | 15 | 26.300 | 82.415 | 4.040 | .002 | Dark |
| Q16@24 | REM rel Theta I | Power Bands | 16 | 23.660 | 51.539 | 3.039 | .037 | Mixed |
| Q17@13 | % REM/TS | REM | 17 | 3.940 | 24.849 | 4.263 | .002 | Mixed |
| Q17@13 | db TS | Fragmentation | 17 | 13.120 | 44.789 | 2.601 | .049 | Mixed |
| Q17@29 | nb REM | REM | 17 | 28.590 | 65.200 | 3.021 | .014 | Mixed |
| Q17@29 | REM min | REM | 17 | 28.590 | 65.200 | 4.870 | <.001 | Mixed |
| Q17@29 | Wake min | State Length | 17 | 30.230 | 65.622 | 7.562 | <.001 | Mixed |
| Q17@29 | NREM min | State Length | 17 | 30.230 | 65.622 | 5.954 | .001 | Dark |
QTL were detected by R package QTL as were the peak LOD scores. The QTL peak was defined as the position within the QTL with the highest LOD score. Trait type was determined by factor analysis (Table 1). Chr = chromosome, LOD = logarithm of odds. FDR = False Discovery Rate (probability). See Supplementary Information for complete trait descriptions. See Supporting Information Table S3 for further information about each QTL.
To account for multiple testing using a non-parametric approach, FDR estimates were computed genome-wide within each sleep trait by permuting individual identifiers for the genotype data and repeating the analyses on 1000 replicate permuted data sets [25]. To eliminate the influence of markers in high linkage disequilibrium, chromosome-wide peak marker LOD scores were used for all FDR computations.
Figure 2QTL and Sleep-wake Trait Network Analysis.
Bayesian network of sleep traits and significant QTL. Sleep-wake traits with QTL that differed in effects between the light and dark periods were represented in the network as two distinct traits, measured in the light and dark periods, denoted by diamond shapes (and suffix ‘l’) and parallelograms (and suffix ‘d’), respectively. The remaining sleep traits were averaged over the light and dark periods, denoted by rectangles (and suffix ‘24’). QTL are represented by ellipses,