Scientists Find Rare Gene Behind Short Sleepers

August 14, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists have discovered a gene that helps a mother and daughter stay alert on about six hours sleep a night, two hours less than the rest of their family needs.

It is believed to be a very rare mutation, not an excuse for the rest of us who stay up too late. But the finding, published in Friday's edition of the journal Science, offers a new lead to study how sleep affects health.

The National Institutes of Health says adults need seven hours to nine hours of sleep for good health. Regularly getting too little increases the risk of health problems, including memory impairment and a weakened immune system. A major 2006 study estimated that as many as 30 million Americans suffer chronic insomnia, and millions more have other sleep disorders, including sleep apnea.

University of California, San Francisco, researchers have long hunted genes related to how and when people sleep. In 2001, they discovered a mutation that puts its carriers' sleep patterns out of whack: These people regularly go to bed around 7:30 p.m. and wake around 3:30 a.m.

Now the same team has found a gene involved in regulating length of sleep. In one family, the 69-year-old mother and her 44-year-old daughter typically go to bed around 10 p.m., and Mom rises around 4 and her daughter around 4:30, with no apparent ill effects. The rest of the family has typical sleep patterns.

Blood tests showed the women harbored a mutation in a gene named DEC2 that is involved in regulation of circadian rhythms, the body's clock. A check of more than 250 stored DNA samples didn't find another carrier.

Then lead researcher Ying-Hui Fu, a neurology professor, and colleagues bred mice and fruit flies that carried the mutation. Sure enough, the flies' activity and brain-wave measurements on the mice showed those with the mutation slept less—and the mice needed less time to recover from sleep deprivation.

The result: A model that "provides a unique opportunity" to study the effects of different amounts of sleep, Fu concluded.

Tags:
insomnia,
family,
sleep apnea,
sleep,
sleep disorders

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How long have you slept so few hours? How old are you now? Do you take any medications to help you sleep longer/

Barb of KS 12:09PM August 29, 2010

i have been a short sleeper all of my life. i also sleep with a CPAP machine which shows i sleep an average of 3 hours 27 minutes per night.i am also diabetic and have fibromyalgia. i also have other medical conditions which may or may not be related.

i feel exhausted all of the time.i have never suffered from depression and enjoy my life and the people in it.

chronic pain has also been a contributing factor in the amount of time i sleep which decreases slowly.

i am sure my lack of sleep and apnea that went untreated for twenty years has been the main cause of the sever muscle wastage that i have experienced especially over the last five years

my thigh muscles are non existent and all muscles throughout my body including in my eyes and face have noticeably declined. i have associated weight loss.i feel that all of my conditions are related and feed off each other.

the biggest disadvantage is the memory loss both short and long term that affects my ability to administer medications on time and often miss them altogether including insulin used to treat the diabetes

in spite of all of this and the debilitating pain i manage to keep my home well and take care of my elderly father and intellectually handicaped granddaughter as well as a teenage foster daughter.

i am simply to busy to give in or dwell on my condition.

there are times i cant stand up and times when i sit on the floor to vaccum clean.

yes it takes me around 12 hours to accomplish what a fit person could do in 2 or 3 hours but i wouldnt want to be anywhere else but here with my family. it would be nice to be pain free though so i could do a little more and enjoy gardening again which is on of the passions i had to give up'

a positive mental attitude is essential as is being needed and feeling useful.

i am sure this condition will one day be found to be a syndrome and some or all of my conditions will be found to be related. the list is as follows

diabeties

fibromyalgia

apnea

wasted muscles

retnal myopathy

headaches

bone disease of the spine

misshapen wrists

exhaustion

prone to kidney stones and gall stones

erratic heartbeat

insomnia

and on and on and on.

dearn walker of HI 9:20AM August 19, 2009

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