The researchers
say their findings, published in Nature,
provide insight into the role of sleep, but still leave an open question around
what function the latter half of a night’s sleep serves.
The researchers say the study supports
the Synaptic Homeostasis Hypothesis, a key theory on the purpose of sleep which
proposes that sleeping acts as a reset for the brain.
Lead author Professor Jason Rihel (UCL
Cell & Developmental Biology) said: “When we are awake, the connections
between brain cells get stronger and more complex. If this activity were to
continue unabated, it would be energetically unsustainable. Too many active
connections between brain cells could prevent new connections from being made
the following day.
“While the function of sleep remains
mysterious, it may be serving as an ‘off-line’ period when those connections
can be weakened across the brain, in preparation for us to learn new things the
following day.”
For the study, the scientists used
optically translucent zebrafish, with genes enabling synapses (structures that
communicate between brain cells) to be easily imaged. The research team
monitored the fish over several sleep-wake cycles.
The researchers found that brain cells
gain more connections during waking hours, and then lose them during sleep.
They found that this was dependent on how much sleep pressure (need for sleep)
the animal had built up before being allowed to rest; if the scientists
deprived the fish from sleeping for a few extra hours, the connections
continued to increase until the animal was able to sleep.
Professor Rihel added: “If the patterns
we observed hold true in humans, our findings suggest that this remodelling of
synapses might be less effective during a mid-day nap, when sleep pressure is
still low, rather than at night, when we really need the sleep.”
The researchers also found that these
rearrangements of connections between neurons mostly happened in the first half
of the animal’s nightly sleep. This mirrors the pattern of slow-wave activity,
which is part of the sleep cycle that is strongest at the beginning of the
night.
First author Dr Anya Suppermpool (UCL
Cell & Developmental Biology and UCL Ear Institute) said: “Our findings add
weight to the theory that sleep serves to dampen connections within the brain,
preparing for more learning and new connections again the next day. But our
study doesn’t tell us anything about what happens in the second half of the
night. There are other theories around sleep being a time for clearance of
waste in the brain, or repair for damaged cells – perhaps other functions kick
in for the second half of the night.”
Source: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2024/may/sleep-resets-brain-connections-only-first-few-hours
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07367-3
Source: Sleep resets brain connections – but only for first few hours – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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