Caros colegas do SBlogI,
Li recentemente um artigo que
gostaria de compartilhar com vocês neste final de ano. Principalmente para os
que por algum motivo: deadlines ou até mesmo filhos, não tiveram a oportunidade
de dormir o suficiente e estão esperando ansiosamente o recesso ou férias de
final de ano.
Reference: Sleep drives metabolite
clearance from the adult brain.Science. 2013 Oct 18;342(6156):373-7. doi:
10.1126/science.1241224. PMID: 24136970.
Pesquisando mais sobre o assunto
achei um comentário sobre o estudo no NIH News para a sua apreciação (http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/october2013/10282013clear.htm):
How Sleep Clears the Brain
A mouse study suggests that sleep helps restore the brain by
flushing out toxins that build up during waking hours. The results point to a
potential new role for sleep in health and disease.
Cerebrospinal fluid (blue) flows through the brain and clears
out toxins through a series of channels that expand during sleep. Image
courtesy of Maiken Nedergaard.
Scientists and philosophers have long wondered why people sleep
and how it affects the brain. Sleep is important for storing memories. It also
has a restorative function. Lack of sleep impairs reasoning, problem-solving,
and attention to detail, among other effects. However, the mechanisms behind
these sleep benefits have been unknown.
Dr. Maiken Nedergaard and her colleagues at the University of
Rochester Medical Center recently discovered a system that drains waste
products from the brain. Cerebrospinal fluid, a clear liquid surrounding the
brain and spinal cord, moves through the brain along a series of channels that
surround blood vessels. The system is managed by the brain’s glial cells, and
so the researchers called it the glymphatic system.
The scientists also reported that the glymphatic system can help
remove a toxic protein called beta-amyloid from brain tissue. Beta-amyloid is
renowned for accumulating in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Other research has shown that brain levels of beta-amyloid decrease during
sleep. In their new study, the team tested the idea that sleep might affect
beta-amyloid clearance by regulating the glymphatic system. The work was funded
by NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
The researchers first injected dye into the cerebrospinal fluid
of mice and monitored electrical brain activity as they tracked the dye flow
through the animals’ brains. As reported in the October 18, 2013, edition ofScience, the dye barely flowed
when the mice were awake. In contrast, when the mice were unconscious—asleep or
anesthetized—it flowed rapidly.
Changes in the way fluid moves through the brain between
conscious and unconscious states may reflect differences in the space available
for movement. To test the idea, the team used a method that measures the volume
of the space outside brain cells. They found that this “extracellular” volume
increased by 60% in the brain’s cortex when the mice were asleep or
anesthetized.
The researchers next injected mice with labeled beta-amyloid and
measured how long it lasted in their brains when they were asleep and awake.
Beta-amyloid disappeared twice as quickly in the brains of mice that were
asleep.
Glial cells control flow through the glymphatic system by
shrinking and swelling. The hormone noradrenaline, which increases alertness,
is known to cause cells to swell. The researchers thus tested whether the
hormone might affect the glymphatic system. Treating mice with drugs that block
noradrenaline induced a sleep-like state and increased brain fluid flow and
extracellular brain volume. This result suggests a molecular connection between
the sleep-wake cycle and the brain’s cleaning system.
The study raises the possibility that certain neurological
disorders might be prevented or treated by manipulating the glymphatic system.
“These findings have significant implications for treating ‘dirty brain’
diseases like Alzheimer’s,” Nedergaard says. “Understanding precisely how and
when the brain activates the glymphatic system and clears waste is a critical
first step in efforts to potentially modulate this system and make it work more
efficiently.”
RELATED LINKS:
New Brain Cleaning System
Discovered:
http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/september2012/09172012brain.htm
The Benefits of Slumber:
http://newsinhealth.nih.gov/issue/apr2013/feature1
Alzheimer's Disease May Stem
from Protein Clearance Problem:
http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/december2010/ 12202010alzdisease.htm
http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/december2010/ 12202010alzdisease.htm
Sleep and Memory in the Aging
Brain:
http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/february2013/02112013sleep.htm
Naps Can Help Preschool
Children Learn:
http://www.nih.gov/researchmatters/september2013/09302013naps.htm
Gostaria de terminar com um
trecho do livro de François Jacob, O rato, a mosca e o homem: “Em pesquisa básica, se não há de início
uma boa dose de incerteza sobre os resultados de um experimento, não há possibilidade de que se trate de um assunto interessante. Em geral, parte-se de dados algo ambíguos e
incompletos. O problema consiste em encontrar relações entre fragmentos de informações aparentemente
independentes.”
Boas Festas!
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