concept

familial advanced sleep-phase syndrome

Also known as: FASPS

Facts (12)

Sources
Extent and Health Consequences of Chronic Sleep Loss and ... - NCBI ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Colten HR, Altevogt BM · National Academies Press 10 facts
claimTwo pedigrees of familial advanced sleep phase syndrome were identified in Japan.
claimReid et al. (2001) conducted research on familial advanced sleep phase syndrome.
referenceXu et al. (2005) identified the functional consequences of a CKIdelta mutation, which causes familial advanced sleep phase syndrome.
claimFamilial advanced sleep phase syndrome is associated with an hPer2 phosphorylation site mutation, as reported by Toh et al. in Science in 2001.
claimA candidate gene, human PER2, has been identified as resulting in familial advanced sleep phase syndrome.
claimA mutation in the hPer2 phosphorylation site is linked to familial advanced sleep phase syndrome.
referenceReid KJ, Chang AM, Dubocovich ML, Turek FW, Takahashi JS, and Zee PC studied familial advanced sleep phase syndrome, with findings published in the Archives of Neurology in 2001.
referenceThe article 'Functional consequences of a CKIdelta mutation causing familial advanced sleep phase syndrome' by Xu Y, Padiath QS, Shapiro RE, Jones CR, Wu SC, Saigoh N, Saigoh K, Ptacek LJ, and Fu YH was published in Nature in 2005, volume 434, issue 7033, pages 640–644.
claimToh et al. identified an hPer2 phosphorylation site mutation in patients with familial advanced sleep phase syndrome.
referenceK. Satoh and colleagues identified two pedigrees of familial advanced sleep phase syndrome in Japan, as reported in a 2003 study in the journal Sleep.
Circadian rhythm - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 2 facts
referenceJones CR et al. identified familial advanced sleep-phase syndrome as a short-period circadian rhythm variant in humans in a 1999 study published in Nature Medicine.
referenceK.L. Toh, C.R. Jones, Y. He, E.J. Eide, W.A. Hinz, and D.M. Virshup identified an hPer2 phosphorylation site mutation in familial advanced sleep phase syndrome, published in Science in 2001.