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Publication : Homer1a is a core brain molecular correlate of sleep loss.

First Author  Maret S Year  2007
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  104
Issue  50 Pages  20090-5
PubMed ID  18077435 Mgi Jnum  J:128604
Mgi Id  MGI:3767536 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0710131104
Citation  Maret S, et al. (2007) Homer1a is a core brain molecular correlate of sleep loss. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104(50):20090-5
abstractText  Sleep is regulated by a homeostatic process that determines its need and by a circadian process that determines its timing. By using sleep deprivation and transcriptome profiling in inbred mouse strains, we show that genetic background affects susceptibility to sleep loss at the transcriptional level in a tissue-dependent manner. In the brain, Homer1a expression best reflects the response to sleep loss. Time-course gene expression analysis suggests that 2,032 brain transcripts are under circadian control. However, only 391 remain rhythmic when mice are sleep-deprived at four time points around the clock, suggesting that most diurnal changes in gene transcription are, in fact, sleep-wake-dependent. By generating a transgenic mouse line, we show that in Homer1-expressing cells specifically, apart from Homer1a, three other activity-induced genes (Ptgs2, Jph3, and Nptx2) are overexpressed after sleep loss. All four genes play a role in recovery from glutamate-induced neuronal hyperactivity. The consistent activation of Homer1a suggests a role for sleep in intracellular calcium homeostasis for protecting and recovering from the neuronal activation imposed by wakefulness.
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