O'Callaghan_2017_Neurosci.Res_116_29

Reference

Title : Cell adhesion molecules and sleep - O'Callaghan_2017_Neurosci.Res_116_29
Author(s) : O'Callaghan EK , Ballester Roig MN , Mongrain V
Ref : Neurosci Res , 116 :29 , 2017
Abstract :

Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) play essential roles in the central nervous system, where some families are involved in synaptic development and function. These synaptic adhesion molecules (SAMs) are involved in the regulation of synaptic plasticity, and the formation of neuronal networks. Recent findings from studies examining the consequences of sleep loss suggest that these molecules are candidates to act in sleep regulation. This review highlights the experimental data that lead to the identification of SAMs as potential sleep regulators, and discusses results supporting that specific SAMs are involved in different aspects of sleep regulation. Further, some potential mechanisms by which SAMs may act to regulate sleep are outlined, and the proposition that these molecules may serve as molecular machinery in the two sleep regulatory processes, the circadian and homeostatic components, is presented. Together, the data argue that SAMs regulate the neuronal plasticity that underlies sleep and wakefulness.

PubMedSearch : O'Callaghan_2017_Neurosci.Res_116_29
PubMedID: 27884699

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Citations formats

O'Callaghan EK, Ballester Roig MN, Mongrain V (2017)
Cell adhesion molecules and sleep
Neurosci Res 116 :29

O'Callaghan EK, Ballester Roig MN, Mongrain V (2017)
Neurosci Res 116 :29