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Sleep and growth hormone: a vital connection revealed

(@samuel-bowers)
New Member

Sleep is often treated as downtime, a passive break between the real business of being awake. But a new study has revealed that sleep is active, essential biology, showing how the brain uses the night to flood the body with growth hormone to repair muscles, strengthen bones and balance metabolism. Researchers have uncovered the neural circuitry that explains why growth hormone surges during shut-eye, and why cutting corners on sleep undermines our physical health.

For the first time, scientists from the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) have discovered just why growth hormone (GH) surges at night, particularly in deep sleep – something we’ve known for a while but not the mechanism driving it. In this animal study, the team uncovered a novel feedback mechanism that balances hormone levels to power a range of tasks – including helping to build muscle.

“People know that growth hormone release is tightly related to sleep, but only through drawing blood and checking growth hormone levels during sleep,” said study first author Xinlu Ding, a postdoctoral fellow in UC Berkeley’s Department of Neuroscience. “We’re actually directly recording neural activity in mice to see what’s going on. We are providing a basic circuit to work on in the future to develop different treatments.”

GH isn’t just about children growing taller; in adults, it is crucial for maintaining muscle mass, bone density, healthy fat distribution and blood sugar regulation. Low levels are linked to frailty, weaker bones, belly fat, insulin resistance and higher cardiovascular risk – all hallmarks of aging. The link between sleep and GH is clear, but the precise neuroendocrine wiring that allows one to amplify the other wasn’t.

Essentially, we have one set of neurons that releases growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH), which stimulates the pituitary to produce growth hormone. While another set releases somatostatin (SST), which inhibits it (this group is further divided into two subtypes that fine-tune the brake on GH output). In this study, the team focused on these two small peptide hormones, showing how together these cells act like an accelerator and a brake to balance GH release across different phases of sleep.

The team used genetic tools, calcium imaging and optogenetics to identify how these two gas pedal/brake hormones operate differently during REM and non-REM sleep. Somatostatin and GHRH spike during REM sleep to boost GH levels, but SST decreases and GHRH increases only moderately during non-REM sleep to boost GH.

If this sounds confusing to you, you’re not alone. But the scientists discovered that although SST is described as an inhibitor, it can also act as a timekeeper. In REM sleep, bursts of both SST and GHRH combine to produce sharp pulses of GH, while in non-REM sleep, SST activity drops, allowing steadier hormone release. Together, the two systems ensure GH is delivered in the right rhythm at the right time.

The researchers also discovered a feedback loop between GH and a brainstem hub called the locus coeruleus, which functions to keep us alert. As GH builds up during sleep, it gently stimulates this hub to prepare the body for waking up. But if the locus coeruleus is overstimulated, it flips the other way and promotes sleepiness again. The result is a yin–yang balance, where sleep drives GH, and GH helps shape the rhythm of sleep and wakefulness.


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Topic starter Posted : 03/06/2025 1:08 am
Aaron Johnson
(@aaron-johnson)
New Member

why your weight has stalled even though you”re eating a surplus


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Posted : 03/06/2025 7:08 am
Cynthia Cooke
(@cynthia-cooke)
Active Member

the mental struggle of seeing your abs disappear during a bulk


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Posted : 03/06/2025 8:08 am
Eddie Wells
(@eddie-wells)
New Member

is it better to bulk for 16 weeks or just stay in a surplus year-round


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Posted : 04/06/2025 11:08 pm
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