Inserting a gene that controls human sleep habits into mice can
transform the rodents into "early birds." This result provides
insight into the molecular mechanisms that drive biological clocks.



Most organisms have an internal clock that synchronizes their activities
to the 24 hour day-the so-called circadian rhythm. PER2 is one of the
genes that control this rhythm in humans. But in 0.3 percent of the
population, the gene goes awry, causing familial advanced sleep phase
syndrome (FASPS), which drives people early to bed and very early to
rise. Despite causing such a striking effect, the change in the protein
encoded by the mutant PER2 gene is quite subtle: a single protein
building block, or amino acid, is changed from a serine to a glycine.

To better understand how PER2 works, Louis J. Ptacek
<http://www.genetics.utah.edu/news/pressbytopic.html>   and  Ying-Hui Fu
of the University of California, San Francisco, genetically engineered
mice with the human gene. Sure enough, when the animals received the
FASPS PER2 mutation, their natural rhythm shortened from an average of
23.7 hours to less than 22. When the researchers made another simple
amino acid switch in the protein, turning the same serine into an
aspartate, the period lengthened to 24.8 hours. Resetting of the
mice's clock seemed linked to the activity of the gene. The first
mutation lowered gene expression, and the second boosted in.

According to Fu, the results have implications far beyond sleep
disorders. Night-shift nurses are more prone the breast cancer, she
notes, and chemotherapy is more effective at certain times. Strokes,
aneurysms, asthma and depression tent to occur at particular times of
day. "Sleep is at the center of all body functions, so understanding
circadian rhythm will help us understand related problems," Fu says.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.wordpress.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

Reply via email to