造血
表观基因组
生物
睡眠(系统调用)
祖细胞
造血干细胞
干细胞
神经科学
免疫学
细胞生物学
遗传学
DNA甲基化
计算机科学
基因表达
基因
操作系统
作者
Cameron S. McAlpine,Máté G. Kiss,Faris M. Zuraikat,David Cheek,Giulia Schiroli,Hajera Amatullah,Pacific Huynh,Mehreen Z. Bhatti,Lai-Ping Wong,Abi G. Yates,Wolfram C. Poller,John E. Mindur,Christopher T. Chan,Henrike Janssen,Jeffrey Downey,Sumnima Singh,Ruslan I. Sadreyev,Matthias Nahrendorf,Kate L. Jeffrey,David T. Scadden,Kamila Naxerova,Marie‐Pierre St‐Onge,Filip K. Świrski
摘要
A sleepless night may feel awful in its aftermath, but sleep's revitalizing powers are substantial, perpetuating the idea that convalescent sleep is a consequence-free physiological reset. Although recent studies have shown that catch-up sleep insufficiently neutralizes the negative effects of sleep debt, the mechanisms that control prolonged effects of sleep disruption are not understood. Here, we show that sleep interruption restructures the epigenome of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) and increases their proliferation, thus reducing hematopoietic clonal diversity through accelerated genetic drift. Sleep fragmentation exerts a lasting influence on the HSPC epigenome, skewing commitment toward a myeloid fate and priming cells for exaggerated inflammatory bursts. Combining hematopoietic clonal tracking with mathematical modeling, we infer that sleep preserves clonal diversity by limiting neutral drift. In humans, sleep restriction alters the HSPC epigenome and activates hematopoiesis. These findings show that sleep slows decay of the hematopoietic system by calibrating the hematopoietic epigenome, constraining inflammatory output, and maintaining clonal diversity.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI