3.8 Article

Depriving Mice of Sleep also Deprives of Food

Journal

CLOCKS & SLEEP
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages 37-51

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/clockssleep4010006

Keywords

circadian rhythms; clock genes; sleep deprivation; food intake; energy expenditure; body composition; lean body mass; fat

Funding

  1. University of Lausanne (Etat de Vaud)
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_130825, CRSII3_136201, 31003A_173182]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [CRSII3_136201, 31003A_173182, 31003A_130825] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The study found that sleep deprivation did not alter clock gene expression in the cortex of mice, and although food intake during sleep deprivation did not differ from baseline, mice lost weight and increased food intake during subsequent recovery. This suggests that the effects commonly attributed to sleep loss during sleep deprivation may actually be related to the resulting energy deficit from food deprivation.
Both sleep-wake behavior and circadian rhythms are tightly coupled to energy metabolism and food intake. Altered feeding times in mice are known to entrain clock gene rhythms in the brain and liver, and sleep-deprived humans tend to eat more and gain weight. Previous observations in mice showing that sleep deprivation (SD) changes clock gene expression might thus relate to altered food intake, and not to the loss of sleep per se. Whether SD affects food intake in the mouse and how this might affect clock gene expression is, however, unknown. We therefore quantified (i) the cortical expression of the clock genes Per1, Per2, Dbp, and Cry1 in mice that had access to food or not during a 6 h SD, and (ii) food intake during baseline, SD, and recovery sleep. We found that food deprivation did not modify the SD-incurred clock gene changes in the cortex. Moreover, we discovered that although food intake during SD did not differ from the baseline, mice lost weight and increased food intake during subsequent recovery. We conclude that SD is associated with food deprivation and that the resulting energy deficit might contribute to the effects of SD that are commonly interpreted as a response to sleep loss.

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