L25 Sleep, Genes, & Schizophrenia Flashcards
What is Sleep?
Sleep:
- A process when your body rests & restores energy
- It is an active state that affects both your physical & mental well-being
What 2 basic states compose sleep?
- Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep
- Non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep
How many stages make up Non-Rem sleep?
Describe each stage
Stage 1:
- Decrease in activity between wakefulness & stage 1
- Eyes are closed and a person can easily be awakened
- Usually last ~10 min
Stage 2:
- A period of light sleep with spontaneous periods of muscle tone mixed with periods of muscle relaxation
- Decreased HR and body temperatures
- Usually lasts about 20 min
Stage 3:
- Deep sleep stages (AKA slow-wave or delta sleep)
- Repair and regenerates tissues
- Builds bone & muscle
- Appears to strengthen the immune system
Explain REM Sleep
REM Sleep:
- Usually occurs 90 minutes after sleep onset
- Several periods occur:
- First period of REM typically lasts 10 minutes
- Each recurring REM stage lengthens
- Final one may last up to an hour
- Percentage of REM sleep decreases:
- Infancy: 50% (highest)
- Adult: 20%
- Characterized by;
- Heart rate & respiration speed up and become erratic; the eyes move rapidly in different directions
- Intense dreaming occurs as a result of heighten brain activity; however, paralysis occurs simultaneously in the major voluntary muscle groups
What does sleep depriviation lead to?
Sleep deprivation:
Causes the brain to become incapable of;
- Putting an emotional event into the proper perspective
- Making a controlled, suitable response to the event
Leads to:
- Impaired memory and thought processes;
- Depression
- Decreased immune response
- Fatigue
- Increased pain
May be linked to serious diseases, such as;
- Heart disease
- Type II diabetes
- Mental illness including psychosis & bipolar disorder
Define Schizophrenia
Symptoms?
Treatment?
Schizophrenia:
- Mental disorder characterized by a breakdown in thinking & poor emotional responses.
Symptoms:
- Delusions, such as paranoia; Hearing voices or noises that are not there
- Disorganized thinking
- Lack of emotion & motivation
- Symptoms cause significant social and work problems
- Typically begin in young adulthood; ~0.3–0.7% of people are affected during their lifetime
Treatment:
- Mainstay of treatment is antipsychotic medication, which primarily suppresses dopamine receptor activity
- 2nd-Gen medications (i.e. Clozapine) are generally preferred because they pose a lower risk of serious side effects than do first-generation antipsychotics
What are the causes of schizophrenia?
Multifactorial disorder:
- Combination of genetic & environmental factors
- Primary genes (2):
- Dysbindin (DTNBP1)
- Neuregulin (NRG1)
How is sleep associated with schizophrenia?
~80% of schizophrenia patients have sleep problems (usually not linked with medication side effect)
The neural and biological system that regulates our sleep-wake cycles to dark and light (collectively known as the clock genes) may play a role in mental disorders
For example, a gene called SNAP25, is important in the circadian system
Mutations in Clock Leads to insomnia, depression and schizophrenia
What is the SNAP25 gene?
How is it connected with metal health?
Synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP-25):
- Component of the trans-SNARE complex, & account for the specificity of membrane fusion & to directly execute fusion by forming a tight complex that brings the synaptic vesicle and plasma membranes together
- Also plays a role in the circadian system and for vesicle cycling in clock cell regulation
Mouse models:
- Heterozygous deletion of the SNAP-25 gene in mice results in a hyperactive phenotype similar to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
- Missense mutations in SNAP25, resulting in a mouse model of schizophrenia, lead to impaired exocytotic vesicle recycling and exocytosis, along with a reduction in excitatory postsynaptic potentials
Results;
- Suggest that abnormalities in NT signaling predisposing an individual to neuropsychiatric illness can have a direct impact upon sleep/wake timing
- Stabilization of sleep may help reduce symptoms and improve quality of life