What causes us to sleep?
The answer may lie not only in our brains, but in their complex interplay with
the micro-organisms spawned in our intestines.
New research from Washington State
University suggests a new paradigm in understanding sleep, demonstrating that a
substance in the mesh-like walls of bacteria, known as peptidoglycan, is
naturally present in the brains of mice and closely aligned with the sleep
cycle.
Those findings serve to update a broader
hypothesis that has been in development at WSU for years — proposing that sleep
arises from communication between the body’s sleep regulatory systems and the
multitude of microbes living inside us.
“This added a new dimension to what we
already know,” said Erika English, a PhD candidate at WSU and lead author
on two recently published scientific papers introducing the findings.
This view of sleep as arising from that
“holobiont condition” joins a growing body of evidence suggesting that our gut
microbiomes play an important role in cognition, appetite, sex drive and other
activity — a view that turns traditional brain-centric models of cognition
upside-down and has implications for our understanding of evolution and free
will, as well as the development of future treatments for sleep disorders.
The recent findings regarding
peptidoglycan, or PG, lend weight to that hypothesis and point to a possible
regulatory role for bacterial cell wall products in sleep. PG is known to
promote sleep when injected in animals, but until recently, the conventional
view held that it did not naturally migrate to the brain.
English found that PG, along with its
receptor molecules involved in PG signaling and communication, was present
in different locations within the brain, at levels that changed with the time
of day and sleep deprivation.
The findings were reported in July in Frontiers in Neuroscience; longtime WSU sleep researcher and Regents Professor
James Krueger co-authored the paper. English is also lead author of a recent
paper with Krueger in the journal Sleep Medicine Reviews that proposes the
“holobiont condition” hypothesis of sleep.
That paper combines two prevailing
views. One posits that sleep is regulated by the brain and neurological
systems. Another focuses on “local sleep,” which frames slumber as the result
of an accumulation of sleep-like states among small cellular networks
throughout the body. Such sleep-like states have been observed among cells in
vitro, known as the “sleep in a dish” model.
As these smaller pockets of sleep
accumulate, like lights going off in a house, the body tips from wakefulness
toward sleep.
The new hypothesis merges those
theories, proposing that sleep results from the interplay between the body and
its resident micro-organisms — two autonomous systems that interact and
overlap.
“It’s not one or the other, it’s both.
They have to work together,” English said. “Sleep really is a process. It
happens at many different speeds for different levels of cellular and tissue
organization and it comes about because of extensive coordination.”
________
Links between the microbiome and behavior are emerging on several
fronts, indicating that micro-organisms formed in the gut play an important
role in cognition and fundamental human behaviors. This work upends the
traditional view of human neurology, suggesting that it is not completely
top-down — i.e., the result of decision-making in the brain — but bottom-up —
i.e., driven by the tiny organisms whose evolution shaped animals to serve as
their hosts and whose needs influence the activities and cognition of their
hosts.
“We have a whole community of microbes
living within us. Those microbes have a much longer evolutionary history than
any mammal, bird or insect — much longer, billions of years longer,” said
Krueger, who was named a “Living Legend in Sleep Research” by the Sleep
Research Society in 2023. “We think sleep evolution began eons ago with the
activity/inactivity cycle of bacteria, and the molecules that were driving that
are related to the ones driving cognition today.”
English’s work expands upon known links
between bacteria and sleep, including the fact that sleep patterns affect the
function of the gut microbiome and that bacterial infections cause people to
sleep more.
The new findings begin to delve into
questions that English looks forward to exploring further.
“Now that the world has come to
appreciate how important microbes are, not just for disease but also for
health, it’s a very exciting time to start to expand on our understanding of
how we are communicating with our microbes and how our microbes are communicating
with us,” she said.
Source: https://news.wsu.edu/press-release/2025/09/24/key-to-the-riddle-of-sleep-may-be-linked-to-bacteria/
Source: Key to the riddle of sleep may be linked to bacteria – Scents of Science
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