Can deep sleep fight Alzheimer’s?

Poor sleep—particularly a deficit of deep, restorative slumber—is a channel through which the beta-amyloid protein believed to trigger Alzheimer’s disease attacks the brain’s long-term memory.

“Our findings reveal a new pathway through which Alzheimer’s disease may cause memory decline later in life,” says Matthew Walker professor of neuroscience at the University of California, Berkeley.

The good news about the findings is that poor sleep is potentially treatable and can be enhanced through exercise, behavioral therapy, and even electrical stimulation that amplifies brain waves during sleep, a technology that has been used successfully in young adults to increase their overnight memory.

Vicious cycle

“This discovery offers hope,” Walker says. “Sleep could be a novel therapeutic target for fighting back against memory impairment in older adults and even those with dementia.”

The study was co-led by UC Berkeley neuroscientists Bryce Mander and William Jagust, a leading expert on Alzheimer’s disease. The team has received a major National Institutes of Health grant to conduct a longitudinal study to test their hypothesis that sleep is an early warning sign or biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease.

While most earlier research depended on animal subjects, the new study that is published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, has the advantage of human subjects, says neuroscientist William Jagust.

“Over the past few years, the links between sleep, beta-amyloid, memory, and Alzheimer’s disease have been growing stronger. Our study shows that this beta-amyloid deposition may lead to a vicious cycle in which sleep is further disturbed and memory impaired.”

Brain cleanser

Using a powerful combination of brain imaging and other diagnostic tools on 26 older adults who have not been diagnosed with dementia, researchers looked for the link between bad sleep, poor memory, and the toxic accumulation of beta-amyloid proteins.

“The data we’ve collected are very suggestive that there’s a causal link,” says lead author Bryce Mander, a postdoctoral researcher in the Sleep and Neuroimaging Laboratory directed by Walker. “If we intervene to improve sleep, perhaps we can break that causal chain.”

A buildup of beta-amyloid has been found in Alzheimer’s patients and, independently, in people reporting sleep disorders. Moreover, a 2013 University of Rochester study found that the brain cells of mice would shrink during non-rapid-eye-movement (non-REM) sleep to make space for cerebrospinal fluids to wash out toxic metabolites such as beta-amyloid.

“Sleep is helping wash away toxic proteins at night, preventing them from building up and from potentially destroying brain cells,” Walker says. “It’s providing a power cleanse for the brain.”

Specifically, the researchers looked at how the quantity of beta-amyloid in the brain’s medial frontal lobe impairs deep non-REM sleep, which we need to retain and consolidate fact-based memories.

Safe storage files

A previous study showed that powerful brain waves generated during non-REM sleep play a key role in transferring memories from the hippocampus—which supports short-term storage for information—to longer-term storage in the frontal cortex. In elderly people, deterioration of this frontal region of the brain has been linked to poor-quality sleep.

For the new study, researchers used positron emission tomography (PET) scans to measure the accumulation of beta-amyloid in the brain; functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to measure activity in the brain during memory tasks; an electroencephalographic (EEG) machine to measure brain waves during sleep; and statistical models to analyze all the data.

The research was performed on 26 older adults, between the ages of 65 and 81, who showed no existing evidence of dementia or other neurodegenerative, sleep, or psychiatric disorders. First, they each received PET scans to measure levels of beta-amyloid in the brain, after which they were tasked with memorizing 120 word pairs, and then tested on how well they remembered a portion of them.

Participants then slept for eight hours, during which EEG measured their brain waves. The following morning, their brains were scanned using fMRI as they recalled the remaining word pairs. At this point, researchers tracked activity in the hippocampus, where memories are temporarily stored before they move to the prefrontal cortex.

“The more you remember following a good night of sleep, the less you depend on the hippocampus and the more you use the cortex,” Walker says. “It’s the equivalent of retrieving files from the safe storage site of your computer’s hard drive, rather than the temporary storage of a USB stick.”

Which comes first?

Overall, participants with the highest levels of beta-amyloid in the medial frontal cortex had the poorest quality of sleep and, consequently, performed worst on the memory test the following morning, with some forgetting more than half of the information they had memorized the previous day.

“The more beta-amyloid you have in certain parts of your brain, the less deep sleep you get and, consequently, the worse your memory,” Walker says. “Additionally, the less deep sleep you have, the less effective you are at clearing out this bad protein. It’s a vicious cycle.

“But we don’t yet know which of these two factors—the bad sleep or the bad protein—initially begins this cycle. Which one is the finger that flicks the first domino, triggering the cascade?”

That’s what the researchers hope to determine as they track a new set of older adults over the next five years, Mander says.

“This is a new pathway linking Alzheimer’s disease to memory loss, and it’s an important one because we can do something about it.”

Other researchers from UC Berkeley and from the California Pacific Medical Center and the University of California, San Diego, are coauthors of the study, which was funded by the National Institute of Aging.

Source: UC Berkeley