3 MIN. READ

Ozempic for Sleep?

iStock/Pheelings Media

How many of you are sleep deprived? You trudge through the week on far less sleep than the required 8 hrs/day desperately looking forward to the weekend when you can finally catch up on lost sleep.

Well there are certain groups of people, a small group for sure, who naturally require only 4 – 6 hours of sleep a day to be fully rested.

“Wow, how luck are they” you think.

Well, what if it were possible to take drug, that would provide you with that same naturally ability of requiring less sleep. Would you take it?

 

The Research

A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Dr. Ying-Hui Fu and Dr. Louis Ptáček at the University of California, San Francisco identified a family that included three successive generations of natural short sleepers. When they dug deeper, the discovered a rare gene mutation that was being passed between various family members. What they discovered was family members who inherited one copy of this mutant gene had a shortened sleep cycle.

The gene in question is called ADRB1. ADRB1 is a gene that encodes the beta-1 adrenergic receptor. These receptors are part of the body’s stress response system and are involved in various physiological functions, including increasing heart rate and blood pressure. They are found on many cells in the body and respond to hormones, including those known to regulate the sleep/wake cycle. However, a rare mutant form of the gene promotes natural short sleep because it helps build brains that are easier to rouse and that stay awake longer.

 

There must be downsides to sleeping less, no?

Though they sleep less, natural short sleepers don’t suffer any of the adverse health effects associated with sleep deprivation. “Today, most people are chronically sleep deprived. If you need eight to nine hours, but only sleep seven, you’re sleep deprived,” Fu said. “This has well-known, long-term health consequences. You’re more likely to suffer from cardiovascular disease, cancer, dementia, metabolic problems and a weakened immune system.”

But natural short sleepers actually seem to benefit from this quirk of their biology. The researchers found that short sleepers tend to be more optimistic, more energetic and better multitaskers. They also have a higher pain threshold, don’t suffer from jet lag and some researchers believe they may even live longer. The exact reasons for these benefits remain unknown.

 

So what’s the next logical step?

Gene therapy is a treatment that uses genes to prevent, treat, or cure diseases and disorders. Several drugs have been created whose purpose is to manipulate genes to implement a desired physical effect. Example include AAV (Adeno-associated virus), which is used in Luxturna to treat a form of inherited vision loss and Lipid Nanoparticles which is used in some mRNA vaccines (like those for COVID-19) and in some gene therapies for cancer.

Well what if you could create a drug that could manipulate the mutant form of the ADRB1 gene?

 

Ozempic for Sleep

Think Ozempic for sleep. A drug that would cause your body to naturally and safely only require 4 – 6 hrs of sleep a night. Think of how much more … well, life you could accomplish with an extra 2 to 4 hrs a day!

Is anyone working on such a drug? Not that we aware, no. But we’d be surprised if some drug company didn’t have some top secret lab somewhere doing just that😉.

 

 

Source:

A Rare Mutation of β1-Adrenergic Receptor Affects Sleep/Wake Behaviors

After 10-Year Search, Scientists Find Second ‘Short Sleep’ Gene

Gene Therapy

Share the Post:

Active Aging News

Weekly Newsletter

RELATED NEWS

Mature man in sportswear sitting on the ground with a barbell

Muscle Loss on GLP-1s: Fact vs. Fiction for Older Adults

Happy mature woman applying serum or natural oil on her scalp, looking at her reflection in mirror and smiling. Organic cosmetics for haircare, damaged dry hair treatment, daily beauty routine

Hair-Raising Concerns: A Closer Look at Female Hair Loss Solutions

Worried Senior Man In Bed At Night Suffering With Insomnia

Wanna Sleep Better After 60? Grab Those Weights!

Elderly lady getting immunization via anti-viral vaccine.

Shingles Vaccine Slashes Dementia Risk in Real-World Study

Pill, medicine and portrait of senior woman for pharmaceutical, medical product and retirement health. Happy elderly person hand holding tablet or supplement for healthy life and vitamins healthcare

The Workout in a Bottle? How Science is Engineering an Exercise Pill

OTHER STORIES

senior couple cooking dinner at home in Latin America

What You Eat in Your 40s-60s Impacts Health at Age 70

Portrait of confident senior black woman smiling and looking at camera with arms folded

Seniors 65+ See Biggest Health Gains from Employment

2025-2030 USDA dietary guidelines for Americans

The “No-Brainer” Diet: Why the Government Finally Flipped the Food Pyramid

Female doctor giving an injection to a patient

Your “Golden Years” Must-Haves: The Shot List That Keeps You Young at Heart (And Body)

Prebiotics: The ‘Fertilizer’ That Powers Your Gut (and Your Retirement)

Mature businesswoman looking away thoughtfully in her home office

Does Being Single Make You Happier As You Age?

[chatbot style="floating"]

Please enter your email to access your profile