Unknown,Transcriptomics,Genomics,Proteomics

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Mistimed sleep disrupts circadian regulation of the human blood transcriptome


ABSTRACT: 22 healthy volunteers without sleep disorders were resident in an environmental scheduling facility and participated in a forced-desynchrony protocol, in which the sleep-wake cycle and the associated fasting-feeding cycle is scheduled to a 28-hour period, of which one third (i.e. 9h 20min) is scheduled for sleep. Under these conditions, during which light levels in the waking episode are kept low and sleep is scheduled in darkness, the phase of the melatonin rhythm occurred at approximately the same clock time during the first (D1) and fourth (D4) 28-h cycle and there were no major changes in either the amplitude or the waveform of this rhythm. During D1 and D4 7 blood samples were taken, RNA was extracted from leukocytes, labelled and hybridised to human whole-genome microarrays A total of 287 samples comprising 22 human subjects, for which 14 samples across multiple time-points/sleep condition were collected.

ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens

SUBMITTER: Emma Laing 

PROVIDER: E-GEOD-48113 | biostudies-arrayexpress |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress

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Mistimed sleep disrupts circadian regulation of the human transcriptome.

Archer Simon N SN   Laing Emma E EE   Möller-Levet Carla S CS   van der Veen Daan R DR   Bucca Giselda G   Lazar Alpar S AS   Santhi Nayantara N   Slak Ana A   Kabiljo Renata R   von Schantz Malcolm M   Smith Colin P CP   Dijk Derk-Jan DJ  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140121 6


Circadian organization of the mammalian transcriptome is achieved by rhythmic recruitment of key modifiers of chromatin structure and transcriptional and translational processes. These rhythmic processes, together with posttranslational modification, constitute circadian oscillators in the brain and peripheral tissues, which drive rhythms in physiology and behavior, including the sleep-wake cycle. In humans, sleep is normally timed to occur during the biological night, when body temperature is l  ...[more]

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