The problem I intend to address is the function of sleep, a biological puzzle that is still unsolved. Specifically, Iintend to test a comprehensive, novel hypothesis about what sleep is for, called the synaptic homeostasishypothesis (Tononi and Cirelli, Brain Res Bull 2003, Sleep Medicine Rev., 2005). The hypothesis accounts formany facts about sleep and its regulation, from behavioral and phylogenetic evidence to electrophysiological andmolecular observations, and has fundamental implications for health and disease. The hypothesis makes intriguingpredictions that are relevant for both basic and clinical neuroscience, and I propose to test such predictions usingseveral complementary approaches. If the hypothesis survives the tests, we may have for the first time a solidscientific explanation of why we need to sleep.Understanding the function of sleep is obviously important both scientifically and from the perspective ofhuman health. Sleep is a pervasive, universal, and fundamental behavior: It occupies a third of our life, and aneven larger proportion in infants; it is present in every animal species where it has been studied, from fruit flies tohumans; it is tightly regulated, as indicated by the irresistible mounting of sleep pressure after prolongedwakefulness; and even partial deprivation of sleep has serious consequences on cognition, mood, and health.While all available evidence indicates that sleep is of the brain, by the brain, and for the brain, the function ofsleep remains unknown despite decades of intensive research. No comprehensive theory had been advanced sofar, which is why the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis, if corroborated, may constitute a much neededbreakthrough.In fact, the lack of understanding of why we need to sleep is problematic not only from a scientific viewpoint,but also because of its vast implications for public health. Millions of people complain of sleep problems, frominsomnia to excessive daytime sleepiness, from chronic fatigue to irritability associated with unsatisfactory sleep.Sleep problems are an important aspect of several psychiatric disorders, notably mood disorders and anxietydisorders. Finally, sleep deprivation has high social costs, from driving and work-related accidents to chronicallypoor performance. A large segment of the population is therefore treated routinely with drugs aimed at improvingsleep, or at maintaining wakefulness in the face of sleep pressure. However, such treatments are hampered by ourignorance concerning the functions of sleep. Which sleep disturbances should be taken seriously because theyreflect a functional impairment and which, if any, do not interfere significantly with the functions carried out bysleep? Which abnormalities of sleep are likely to have neurobiological consequences that can lead to psychiatricdisorders such as depression? And finally, what aspect of sleep should be enhanced by pharmacological orbehavioral treatments, and what indices should we consider to determine their effectiveness?
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Balduzzi, David; Tononi, Giulio (2013) What can neurons do for their brain? Communicate selectivity with bursts. Theory Biosci 132:27-39 |
Dash, Michael B; Tononi, Giulio; Cirelli, Chiara (2012) Extracellular levels of lactate, but not oxygen, reflect sleep homeostasis in the rat cerebral cortex. Sleep 35:909-19 |
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