Study in mice suggests sleep problems may be
early sign of Alzheimer's
September 6, 2012--Sleep disruptions may be
among the earliest indicators of Alzheimer's
disease, scientists at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis report Sept.
5 in Science Translational Medicine.
Working in a mouse model, the researchers
found that when the first signs of
Alzheimer's plaques appear in the brain, the
normal sleep-wake cycle is significantly
disrupted.
"If sleep abnormalities begin this early in
the course of human Alzheimer's disease,
those changes could provide us with an
easily detectable sign of pathology," says
senior author David M. Holtzman, MD, the
Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor
and head of Washington University's
Department of Neurology.
"As we start to treat Alzheimer's patients
before the onset of dementia, the presence
or absence of sleep problems may be a rapid
indicator of whether the new treatments are
succeeding."
Holtzman's laboratory was among the first to
link sleep problems and Alzheimer's through
studies of sleep in mice genetically altered
to develop Alzheimer's plaques as they age.
In a study published in 2009, he showed that
brain levels of a primary ingredient of the
plaques naturally rise when healthy young
mice are awake and drop after they go to
sleep. Depriving the mice of sleep disrupted
this cycle and accelerated the development
of brain plaques.
A similar rising and falling of the plaque
component, a protein called amyloid beta,
was later detected in the cerebrospinal
fluid of healthy humans studied by co-author
Randall Bateman, MD, the Charles F. and
Joanne Knight Distinguished Professor of
Neurology at Washington University.
The new research, led by Jee Hoon Roh, MD,
PhD, a neurologist and postdoctoral fellow
in Holtzman's laboratory, shows that when
the first indicators of brain plaques
appear, the natural fluctuations in amyloid
beta levels stop in both mice and humans.
"We suspect that the plaques are pulling in
amyloid beta, removing it from the processes
that would normally clear it from the
brain," Holtzman says.
Mice are nocturnal animals and normally
sleep for 40 minutes during every hour of
daylight, but when Alzheimer's plaques began
forming in their brains, their average sleep
times dropped to 30 minutes per hour.
To confirm that amyloid beta was directly
linked to the changes in sleep, researchers
gave a vaccine against amyloid beta to a new
group of mice with the same genetic
modifications. As these mice grew older,
they did not develop brain plaques. Their
sleeping patterns remained normal and
amyloid beta levels in the brain continued
to rise and fall regularly.
Scientists now are evaluating whether sleep
problems occur in patients who have markers
of Alzheimer's disease, such as plaques in
the brain, but have not yet developed memory
or other cognitive problems.
"If these sleep problems exist, we don't yet
know exactly what form they take—reduced
sleep overall or trouble staying asleep or
something else entirely," Holtzman says.
"But we're working to find out."