Back to Search Start Over

Schizophrenia-associated variation at ZNF804A correlates with altered experience-dependent dynamics of sleep slow-waves and spindles in healthy young adults

Authors :
Nicholas J. Timpson
Matt Jones
Kayleigh E Easey
Claire Durant
Laura J Corbin
Charlotte Hellmich
Hugh Marston
Michelle L. Taylor
Ullrich Bartsch
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundThe rs1344706 polymorphism in ZNF804A is robustly associated with schizophrenia (SZ), yet brain and behavioral phenotypes related to this variant have not been extensively characterized. In turn, SZ is associated with abnormal non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep neurophysiology. To examine whether rs1344706 is associated with intermediate neurophysiological traits in the absence of disease, we assessed the relationship between genotype, sleep neurophysiology, and sleep-dependent memory consolidation in healthy participants.MethodsWe recruited healthy adult males, with no history of psychiatric disorder, from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) birth cohort. Participants were homozygous for either the SZ-associated ā€˜Aā€™ allele (N=25) or the alternative ā€˜Cā€™ allele (N=22) at rs1344706. Actigraphy, polysomnography (PSG) and a motor sequencing task (MST) were used to characterize daily activity patterns, sleep neurophysiology and sleep-dependent memory consolidation.ResultsAverage MST learning and sleep-dependent performance improvements were similar across genotype groups, but with increased variability in the AA group. CC participants showed increased slow-wave and spindle amplitudes, plus augmented coupling of slow-wave activity across recording electrodes after learning. Slow-waves and spindles in those with the AA genotype were insensitive to learning, whilst slow-wave coherence decreased following MST training.ConclusionWe describe evidence that rs1344706 polymorphism in ZNF804A is associated with changes in experience- and sleep-dependent, local and distributed neural network activity that supports offline information processing during sleep in a healthy population. These findings highlight the utility of sleep neurophysiology in mapping the impacts of SZ-associated variants on neural circuit oscillations and function.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf1f93f7980d7a1214a19a14aae5e330
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.01.072165