Iran Daily

Sleep problems in Parkinson’s disease addressed

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A team of researcher­s at VIB and KU Leuven has uncovered why people with a hereditary form of Parkinson’s disease suffer from sleep disturbanc­es. The molecular mechanisms uncovered in fruit flies and human stem cells also point to candidate targets for the developmen­t of new treatments.

Parkinson’s disease affects five million people around the globe. Its typical symptoms are related to movement difficulty: Tremor, rigidity, loss of balance. But patients are also faced with several non-motoric symptoms, including disturbed sleep. Nearly all patients experience some form of sleep pattern disturbanc­e, ranging from nocturnal movements or insomnia to daytime sleepiness, medicalxpr­ess.com reported.

Problems with sleeping patterns are among the earliest symptoms of the disease, sometimes occurring as early as 10 years prior to the onset of motor symptoms and often before the actual diagnosis. Needless to say, this has a huge impact on people with Parkinson’s and their loved ones.

Using induced human pluripoten­t stem cells derived from people with a hereditary form of Parkinson’s disease, as well as geneticall­y modified fruit flies with Parkinson’s symptoms, a team of scientists lead by Patrik Verstreken (VIB-KU Leuven Center for Brain & Disease Research) uncovered problems with the so-called neuropepti­dergic neurons, a specific type that regulates sleeping patterns.

Abnormal lipid traffickin­g in these neurons disrupts the production and release of neuropepti­des, which in turn affects the regulation of sleep and circadian rhythms. The result is a disturbed sleepwake cycle in the geneticall­y modified flies.

Jorge Valadas, who is part of the Verstreken team, said, “We uncovered which type of lipid is missing so we could try to rescue the sleep pattern defects by restoring the lipid balance.

“When we model Parkinson’s disease in fruit flies, we find that they have fragmented sleep patterns and difficulti­es in knowing when to go to sleep or when to wake up. But when we feed them phosphatid­ylserine — the lipid that is depleted in the neuropepti­dergic neurons — we see an improvemen­t in a matter of days.”

The findings are promising, but the scientists underscore that a lot of work needs to be done before the results can be translated to patients.

Patrik Verstreken said, “Translatin­g the phosphatid­ylserine experiment­s is not straightfo­rward, as similar sleep manifestat­ions are absent in mouse models of Parkinson’s disease. The good news is that phosphatid­ylserine is already marketed as a food supplement, so if we can prove efficacy in humans, this would be very good news. There are still a lot of questions though. For example, we don’t know if phosphatid­ylserine could be delivered to the brain in humans, or at which dose.”

Non-motoric symptoms often receive less attention, but nonetheles­s have a major impact on patients’ lives. Understand­ing and potentiall­y intervenin­g in what causes sleep problems in Parkinson’s disease is thus an important step forward, but according to Verstreken, the findings are also a real conceptual game changer: “The main culprits of the motor symptoms are dopaminerg­ic neurons, but the circadian rhythm and sleep pattern problems are specific to defects in neuropepti­dergic neurons. Unlike for dopaminerg­ic neurons, the neuropepti­dergic problems are caused by neuronal dysfunctio­n, not degenerati­on, which implies that they can be corrected. This could be a real paradigm shift in the Parkinson’s disease field.”

 ??  ?? Published by medicalxpr­ess.com Immunohist­ochemistry for alpha-synuclein showing positive staining (brown) of an intraneura­l Lewy-body in the Substantia nigra in Parkinson’s disease.
Published by medicalxpr­ess.com Immunohist­ochemistry for alpha-synuclein showing positive staining (brown) of an intraneura­l Lewy-body in the Substantia nigra in Parkinson’s disease.

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