Scientists Have Pinpointed The Annoying Genetic Mutation That Turns Us Into Night Owls
"Carriers
of the mutation are essentially playing catch-up for their entire lives."
Any night owls reading this will be
familiar with the struggle of constantly trying to fit into a morning person's
world. And now researchers say they've finally identified the genetic typo that
causes this social jetlag.
A new study has revealed that many
people who stay up late and struggle to wake up in the morning aren't lazy,
their internal clock is simply genetically programmed to run between 2 and 2.5
hours slower than the rest of the population, thanks to a mutation in a body
clock gene called CRY1.
"Carriers of the mutation have
longer days than the planet gives them, so they are essentially playing
catch-up for their entire lives," says lead researcher Alina Patke from
The Rockefeller University in New York.
To be clear, we're not just talking
about anyone with a smart phone addiction who struggles to fall asleep at
night.
True night owls are people who, even
in the absence of smart phones and electrical lights, will still fall asleep
and wake up late. In contrast, most people who go camping away from city lights
will generally time their sleep with the rising and setting of the
Sun after a few days.
Night owls who struggle to get enough
sleep are often diagnosed at sleep clinics with delayed sleep phase
disorder (DSPD), and researchers estimate that around 10 percent of
the global population is affected by this condition.
In addition to being more tired,
people with DSPD suffer a raft of health issues because their body is
constantly trying to play catch-up with the timeline set by the rest of
society.
The condition has been linked to
anxiety, depression, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. Not to mention the
constant frustration of being traumatised by the alarm clock each morning.
"It's as if these people have
perpetual jet lag, moving eastward every day," said one of the
researchers, Michael Young. "In the morning, they're not ready for the
next day to arrive."
Now the team has shown that it's not
just the fact that these people's body clocks are set later than other people's
- they actually run 2 to 2.5 hours slower on average than the rest of
the population.
Generally, the human body clock is around
24 hours, which means things like digestion, sleep, and cellular repair all fit
in nicely to a standard Earth day. But thanks to a mutation in the CRY1
gene, the new research suggests some people simply need more time.
Patke and her colleagues first
identified this genetic mutation seven years ago, when a 46-year-old woman
came into the sleep clinic after struggling with her late sleep cycle.
Even after being placed in an
apartment without windows, TV, or internet for two weeks, the woman still had a
strangely long 25-hour circadian rhythm, and her sleep was fragmented.
After studying her genes, the team
found that she had a single-letter mutation in the CRY1 gene, which they
suspected could be causing the issue.
For a little background - our
circadian clock begins each day by building up proteins, called activators, in
our cells.
These activators produce their own
inhibitors that, over time, stop the activators from working. When all the
activators in a cell have been silenced, the inhibitors are no longer produced
and gradually the activators surge again, starting the cycle for the next day
once more.
The protein produced by the CRY1 gene
is one of these inhibitors. But scientists still weren't sure how a single
variant in the gene could be having such extreme effects on this woman's body
clock.
In this latest study, the researchers
took things a step further and studied the CRY1 genes in skin cells from the
woman's extended family - showing that they all had the same mutation.
Further investigation revealed that
the change causes a big chunk of the resulting protein to be missing, which
means the inhibiting CRY1 protein becomes overly active and suppresses the
activator for longer than it's supposed to, stretching the daily cycle of the
cells out.
The team then backed up their research
by analysing the sleep patterns of six Turkish families - 39 of the
participants had DSPD and carried the CRY1 'night owl' mutation, and 31 didn't
have either.
The carriers all had delayed sleep
onset times and some of them had fractured, irregular sleep patterns.
For the 31 people without the genetic
mutation, the midpoint of sleep was 4am, but for people with the gene, it was
between 6 and 8am - which suggests the mutation pushed the body clock back at
least 2 hours.
The good news in all of this is that
our body clock, including CRY1, is controlled by external cues such as light
exposure, so people should be able to effectively manage DSPD if they stick to
a controlled routine.
"An external cycle and good sleep
hygiene can help force a slow-running clock to accommodate a 24-hour day," says
Patke. "We just have to work harder at it."
"It's not inconceivable that one
might develop drugs in the future based on this mechanism," she
added.
The researchers also made it clear
that not all cases of DSPD are caused by this genetic mutation - often there
are other factors involved - but the researchers found it in 1 in 75
individuals of non-Finnish, European ancestry in their research.
"Our variant has an effect on a
large fraction of the population," said Young.
More research now needs to be done to
replicate these results in a larger sample size, and to get an idea of whether
this genetic mutation affects other bodily functions in addition to sleep.