Review
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 3, 591-605 (August 2002) | doi:10.1038/nrn895
The Neurobiology of Sleep: Genetics, cellular physiology and subcortical networks
Edward F. Pace-Schott1 & J. Allan Hobson1 About the authors
Abstract
To appreciate the neural underpinnings of sleep, it is important to view this universal mammalian behaviour at multiple levels of its biological organization. Molecularly, the circadian rhythm of sleep involves interlocking positive- and negative-feedback mechanisms of circadian genes and their protein products in cells of the suprachiasmatic nucleus that are entrained to ambient conditions by light. Circadian information is integrated with information on homeostatic sleep need in nuclei of the anterior hypothalamus. These nuclei interact with arousal systems in the posterior hypothalamus, basal forebrain and brainstem to control sleep onset. During sleep, an ultradian oscillator in the mesopontine junction controls the regular alternation of rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep. Sleep cycles are accompanied by neuromodulatory influences on forebrain structures that influence behaviour, consciousness and cognition.
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Author affiliations
- Laboratory of Neurophysiology, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts Mental Health Center, 74 Fenwood Road, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Correspondence to: Edward F. Pace-Schott1 Email: edward_schott@hms.harvard.edu
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