Metabolic & epigenetic disorders of adolescence sleep deprivation

Project participants

The SmartSense Consortium: Dr. Nolwenn Briand (PI - adipose tissue), Dr. Charlotte Boccara (PI - neurophysiology / sleep), Dr. Damien Dufour (former postdoc - adipose tissue maturation), Dr. Natalia M. Galigniana (postdoc - epigenetics), Dr. Jie Hou (postdoc, UiO Physics), Florian Dapsance (PhD student, UiO Physics), Prof. Ørjan Martinsen (PI; UiO Physics  - sensor technology), and associated lab members

Obesity and bad sleep habits among teenagers are two linked and rising health concerns. Studies trace obesity to poor sleep hygiene: this is worrisome because adolescents get less and less sleep, and obese children have a strong risk of developing cardiometabolic diseases later in life. We do not know why sleep is important for metabolic health.

Ongoing research

We have formed a consortium, SmartSense, where neurophysiologists and physicists are developing mouse models of sleep deprivation and new “smart” sensors so we can wirelessly monitor brain-fat tissue crosstalk. Our lab studies how sleep deprivation in young mice affects adipose tissue development and emergence of metabolic disorders later in life. Our hypothesis is that this long-term effect is epigenetically encoded during adolescence and recalled later in life.

Recent findings

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