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  • Unraveling the developmental and evolutionary constraints on sleep

Is Embryonic Evolution’s pace associated with differences in protein stability?

Light: The new weapon in the battle against Parkinson’s disease!

Unraveling the developmental and evolutionary constraints on sleep
  • World

Unraveling the developmental and evolutionary constraints on sleep

bioxone September 19, 2020September 19, 2020

-Anwita Sarkar, Team bioXone

Thomas Dekker once popularly remarked that “Sleep is the golden chain that binds health and our bodies together”. Dekker’s statement was indeed a true one. Modern-day living across the world does not embrace the importance of sleep and has taken its functions and needs for granted. The necessity of sleep can be determined by two of the most leading hypothesis that sleep prevents neuronal damage and reorganize neural networks necessary for maintaining synaptic homeostasis.

A study was conducted to create a novel mechanistic framework that can be used to quantitatively compare sleep ontogeny with sleep phylogeny. It was also used to distinguish between sleep used for neural reorganization versus repair. An abrupt sharp transition was observed between 2 and 3 years of age in humans. Results revealed that neural reorganization supporting learning is primarily due to changes in the sleep during early ontogeny ( before 2 or 3 years)while the repair is supported by differences in sleep across the phylogeny and after 2 or 3 years in a human.

Moreover, there is substantial evidence that infants spend more time in REM (rapid eye movement) sleep compared with older children and adults. This finding suggests that REM is crucial for neuroplastic reorganization. Thus the generation of this novel theory, compiling the data of sleep and brain development suggests a complex interplay between developmental and evolutionary constraints on sleep.

Source: Cao Junyu, Herman B Alexander, West B Geoffrey, Poe Gina, Savage M Van Unraveling why we sleep: Quantitative analysis reveals abrupt transition from neural reorganization to repair in early development, Science Advances  18 Sep 2020: Vol. 6, no. 38, D.O.I : http://10.1126/sciadv.aba0398.

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Light: The new weapon in the battle against Parkinson’s disease!

bioxone September 20, 2020

–Richismita Hazra, Amity University Kolkata From alleviating depression to healing wounds from curing sleep-disturbances to boosting immunity, light therapy finds considerable applications in the medical field. But can it relate itself to the symptoms of “shaking palsy”-Parkinson’s disease? Neurosurgeon Alim-Louis Benabid of the Climate Institute led a team that expects light to be a weapon […]

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bioxone November 21, 2020November 21, 2020

SUMEDHA GUHA, TECHNO INDIA UNIVERSITY Reelin is an extracellular glycoprotein that acts as a key regulator for different steps in brain wiring and neuronal cell migration. Reelin signalling is required for axonal targeting, regulation of dendritogenesis, and spine formation in mature neurons. It also plays an important role in ensuring hippocampal integrity, synaptic plasticity, and […]

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Souradip Mallick, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela DNA–protein crosslinks induce SOS response as it is mutagenic and 5-azacytidine induces bacterial damage and stimulate homologous recombination. All these consequences of DNA–protein crosslinks and 5-azacytidine were investigated on E.coli DNA–protein crosslinks (DPCs) are mainly formed when a nucleotide residue on DNA forms a covalent bond with a […]

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