Center for Human Sleep Science, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-1650, USA.
Center for Human Sleep Science, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-1650, USA.
Cell Rep Med. 2023 Jul 18;4(7):101100. doi: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2023.101100. Epub 2023 Jul 7.
Insufficient sleep impairs glucose regulation, increasing the risk of diabetes. However, what it is about the human sleeping brain that regulates blood sugar remains unknown. In an examination of over 600 humans, we demonstrate that the coupling of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep spindles and slow oscillations the night before is associated with improved next-day peripheral glucose control. We further show that this sleep-associated glucose pathway may influence glycemic status through altered insulin sensitivity, rather than through altered pancreatic beta cell function. Moreover, we replicate these associations in an independent dataset of over 1,900 adults. Of therapeutic significance, the coupling between slow oscillations and spindles was the most significant sleep predictor of next-day fasting glucose, even more so than traditional sleep markers, relevant to the possibility of an electroencephalogram (EEG) index of hyperglycemia. Taken together, these findings describe a sleeping-brain-body framework of optimal human glucose homeostasis, offering a potential prognostic sleep signature of glycemic control.
睡眠不足会损害葡萄糖调节,增加糖尿病的风险。然而,调节血糖的人类睡眠大脑的具体机制仍不清楚。在对 600 多人的检查中,我们证明前一天晚上非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠纺锤波和慢波同步的耦合与改善次日外周葡萄糖控制有关。我们进一步表明,这种与睡眠相关的葡萄糖途径可能通过改变胰岛素敏感性而不是改变胰岛β细胞功能来影响血糖状态。此外,我们在超过 1900 名成年人的独立数据集上复制了这些关联。具有治疗意义的是,慢波和纺锤波之间的耦合是预测次日空腹血糖的最重要的睡眠指标,甚至比与高血糖可能性相关的传统睡眠标志物更重要,这为脑电图(EEG)指数预测高血糖提供了可能。总之,这些发现描述了一个最佳的人类葡萄糖动态平衡的睡眠大脑-身体框架,提供了血糖控制的潜在预后睡眠特征。