| Literature DB >> 19679812 |
Ying He1, Christopher R Jones, Nobuhiro Fujiki, Ying Xu, Bin Guo, Jimmy L Holder, Moritz J Rossner, Seiji Nishino, Ying-Hui Fu.
Abstract
Sleep deprivation can impair human health and performance. Habitual total sleep time and homeostatic sleep response to sleep deprivation are quantitative traits in humans. Genetic loci for these traits have been identified in model organisms, but none of these potential animal models have a corresponding human genotype and phenotype. We have identified a mutation in a transcriptional repressor (hDEC2-P385R) that is associated with a human short sleep phenotype. Activity profiles and sleep recordings of transgenic mice carrying this mutation showed increased vigilance time and less sleep time than control mice in a zeitgeber time- and sleep deprivation-dependent manner. These mice represent a model of human sleep homeostasis that provides an opportunity to probe the effect of sleep on human physical and mental health.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19679812 PMCID: PMC2884988 DOI: 10.1126/science.1174443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728