The metabolic interplay of sleep and Alzheimer's disease
University Of Kentucky, Lexington KY
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Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT A bidirectional relationship exists between Alzheimerâs disease and sleep, where disrupted sleep increases amyloid-beta (Aβ) and tau pathology and conversely, Aβ and tau aggregation disrupt sleep. The sleep/wake cycle is a master regulator of metabolic and neuronal activity, where daily oscillations in activity are coupled to the production and clearance of Aβ and tau. Although modulating neuronal activity alters both sleep/wake cycles and Aβ/tau release, less is known about how fluctuations in glucose metabolism drive changes in sleep and Alzheimerâs disease related pathology. Therefore, the goal of this proposal is to determine whether changes in metabolic activity lead to changes in neuronal activity to disrupt sleep in Alzheimerâs disease and whether metabolic dysfunction can serve as a novel therapeutic target to rescue sleep and Alzheimerâs pathology. Using hippocampal biosensors coupled with EEG/EMG recordings, this proposal will investigate how glycemic variability and peripheral glucose intolerance affect sleep and Alzheimerâs disease in rodent models of Alzheimerâs related pathology. Moreover, we will establish whether normalizing peripheral glucose homeostasis through treatment with the diabetic medication, metformin, is sufficient to preserve and restore sleep architecture in the setting of Alzheimerâs disease.
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