4.4 Article

Mitochondrial DNA Copy Number in Sleep Duration Discordant Monozygotic Twins

Journal

SLEEP
Volume 38, Issue 10, Pages 1655-U153

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.5665/sleep.5068

Keywords

mitochondrial DNA; copy number; twins; sleep discordance; sleep duration

Funding

  1. NIH [K23HL083350, P30NR011400, RC2HL103416]
  2. Northwest Institute of Genetic Medicine Resource Access Grant
  3. University of Washington General Clinical Research Center Pilot Grant
  4. Oda and Hans Svenningsens Foundation
  5. Dagmar Marshalls Foundation

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Study Objectives: Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number is an important component of mitochondrial function and varies with age, disease, and environmental factors. We aimed to determine whether mtDNA copy number varies with habitual differences in sleep duration within pairs of monozygotic twins. Setting: Academic clinical research center. Participants: 15 sleep duration discordant monozygotic twin pairs (30 twins, 80% female; mean age 42.1 years [SD 15.0]). Design: Sleep duration was phenotyped with wrist actigraphy. Each twin pair included a normal (7-9 h/24) and short (<7 h/24) sleeping twin. Fasting peripheral blood leukocyte DNA was assessed for mtDNA copy number via the n-fold difference between qPCR measured mtDNA and nuclear DNA creating an mtDNA measure without absolute units. We used generalized estimating equation linear regression models accounting for the correlated data structure to assess within-pair effects of sleep duration on mtDNA copy number. Measurements and Results: Mean within-pair sleep duration difference per 24 hours was 94.3 minutes (SD 62.6 min). We found reduced sleep duration (beta = 0.06; 95% CI 0.004, 0.12; P < 0.05) and sleep efficiency (beta = 0.51; 95% CI 0.06, 0.95; P < 0.05) were significantly associated with reduced mtDNA copy number within twin pairs. Thus every 1-minute decrease in actigraphy-defined sleep duration was associated with a decrease in mtDNA copy number of 0.06. Likewise, a 1% decrease in actigraphy-defined sleep efficiency was associated with a decrease in mtDNA copy number of 0.51. Conclusions: Reduced sleep duration and sleep efficiency were associated with reduced mitochondrial DNA copy number in sleep duration discordant monozygotic twins offering a potential mechanism whereby short sleep impairs health and longevity through mitochondrial stress.

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