Picard, Katherine, Dolhan, Kira, Watters, Jyoti J et al. · Advances in neurobiology · 2024 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review examines how microglia—immune cells in the brain and spinal cord—affect sleep and sleep disorders. The authors discuss how sleep problems and lack of sleep can harm brain health and potentially lead to diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. They specifically look at how microglia may be involved in ME/CFS and other sleep disorders, and what happens to these immune cells when people don't get enough sleep.
Why It Matters
Sleep problems are a hallmark feature of ME/CFS, yet the underlying biological mechanisms remain poorly understood. This review suggests that microglial immune activation may contribute to sleep disturbances in ME/CFS, offering a potential biological pathway to investigate and potentially target with future treatments.
Observed Findings
Microglia are activated during sleep deprivation and may regulate the sleep-wake cycle through immune signaling
Microglial dysfunction has been documented in multiple sleep disorders including insomnia, narcolepsy, and sleep-disordered breathing
Sleep deprivation can impair normal microglial functions and lead to prolonged neuroinflammation
ME/CFS is identified as a condition where sleep disturbance and microglial involvement may intersect
Chronic sleep alteration may increase neuroinflammatory responses relevant to neurodegeneration
Inferred Conclusions
Microglia play a regulatory role in normal sleep-wake cycles and respond abnormally in various sleep disorders
Microglial activation may represent a shared biological mechanism across multiple sleep disorders and neurodegenerative diseases
Understanding microglial dysfunction in sleep disorders could identify new therapeutic targets for treating sleep problems
ME/CFS may involve microglial-mediated sleep dysregulation as part of its pathophysiology
Remaining Questions
What are the specific molecular signals that activate microglia during sleep deprivation in ME/CFS patients?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review synthesizes existing literature but does not present new experimental data or clinical trials. It does not prove that microglia are the sole cause of sleep disorders in ME/CFS or establish definitive causation—only associations and proposed mechanisms from other studies. The generalizability of findings across different sleep disorders and ME/CFS subtypes remains unclear.