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Review
Nature Neuroscience  5, 1071 - 1075 (2002)
Published online: ; | doi:10.1038/nn944

Sleeping with the hypothalamus: emerging therapeutic targets for sleep disorders

Emmanuel Mignot, Shahrad Taheri & Seiji Nishino

Stanford University Center for Narcolepsy, 701 Welch Road B, Room 145, Palo Alto, California 94304-5742, USA

Correspondence should be addressed to Emmanuel Mignot mignot@stanford.edu
Delineating the basic mechanisms that regulate sleep will likely result in the development of better treatments for sleep disorders. The hypothalamus is now recognized as a key center for sleep regulation, with hypothalamic neurotransmitter systems providing the framework for therapeutic advances. An increased awareness of the close interaction between sleep and homeostatic systems is also emerging. Progress has occurred in the understanding of narcolepsy—molecular techniques have identified the lateral hypothalamic hypocretin (orexin) neuropeptide system as key to the disorder. Other sleep disorders are now being tackled in the same way and are likely to yield to efforts combining basic and clinical research. Here we highlight the role of the hypothalamus in sleep physiology and discuss neurotransmitter systems, such as adenosine, dopamine, GABA, histamine and hypocretin, that may have therapeutic applications for sleep disorders.

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REFERENCE
Sleep Disorders
Nature Encyclopaedia of Life Sciences

REVIEWS
The Neurobiology of Sleep: Genetics, Cellular Physiology and Subcortical Networks
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NEWS AND VIEWS
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Nature Neuroscience
ISSN: 1097-6256
EISSN: 1546-1726
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