A run of poor sleep can have a potentially profound effect on the internal workings of the human body, say UK researchers.
The activity of hundreds of genes was altered when people's sleep was cut to less than six hours a day for a week.
Writing in the journal PNAS, the researchers said the results helped explain how poor sleep damaged health.
Heart disease, diabetes, obesity and poor brain function have all been linked to substandard sleep.
What missing hours in bed actually does to alter health, however, is unknown.
So researchers at the University of Surrey analysed the blood
of 26 people after they had had plenty of sleep, up to 10 hours each
night for a week, and compared the results with samples after a week of
fewer than six hours a night.
More than 700 genes were altered by the shift. Each contains
the instructions for building a protein, so those that became more
active produced more proteins - changing the chemistry of the body.
Meanwhile the natural body clock was disturbed
- some genes naturally wax and wane in activity through the day, but
this effect was dulled by sleep deprivation.
Prof Colin Smith, from the University of Surrey, told the
BBC: "There was quite a dramatic change in activity in many different
kinds of genes."
Areas such as the immune system and how the body responds to damage and stress were affected.
Prof Smith added: "Clearly sleep is critical to rebuilding
the body and maintaining a functional state, all kinds of damage appear
to occur - hinting at what may lead to ill health.
"If we can't actually replenish and replace new cells, then that's going to lead to degenerative diseases."
He said many people may be even more sleep deprived in their
daily lives than those in the study - suggesting these changes may be
common.
Dr Akhilesh Reddy, a specialist in the body clock at the University of Cambridge, said the study was "interesting".
He said the key findings were the effects on inflammation and
the immune system as it was possible to see a link between those
effects and health problems such as diabetes.
The findings also tie into research attempting to do away
with sleep, such as by finding a drug that could eliminate the effects
of sleep deprivation.
Dr Reddy said: "We don't know what the switch is that causes
all these changes, but theoretically if you could switch it on or off,
you might be able to get away without sleep.
"But my feeling is that sleep is fundamentally important to regenerating all cells."
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