Researchers at the National University of Singapore’s Yong Lu Lin School of Medicine (NUS Medicine) have found that caffeine can help restore certain types of memory impaired by sleep deprivation. The survey results are neuropsychopharmacologyreveals how caffeine acts on well-defined brain pathways involved in social memory, the ability to recognize and distinguish between previously encountered people.
This study provides new insight into how sleep deprivation affects the brain and suggests that the benefits of caffeine may go beyond just increasing alertness.
Effects of sleep deprivation on social memory
The study was led by Associate Professor Sreedharan Sajikumar and first author Dr Lik-Wei Wong from NUS Medicine’s Department of Physiology and Healthy Longevity Translational Research Program.
The research team focused on a part of the brain known as the CA2 region of the hippocampus. Although the hippocampus is important for learning and memory, the CA2 region plays a particularly important role in the formation of social memory. This brain region also receives signals involved in regulating sleep and wakefulness.
To investigate the effects of sleep deprivation, researchers placed experimental animals on a five-hour sleep deprivation schedule. Caffeine was then mixed into drinking water for 7 days of unlimited intake.
Caffeine restores brain communication
Caffeine is a stimulant that blocks the adenosine receptor signaling pathway. Adenosine accumulates during wakefulness and reduces brain activity, causing sleepiness.
The researchers then performed electrophysiological recordings on hippocampal tissue samples to assess synaptic plasticity, the brain’s ability to strengthen or weaken connections between neurons in response to experience and learning.
The results showed that sleep deprivation interferes with the maintenance of synaptic plasticity in the CA2 region. Communication between neurons weakened, reducing the brain’s ability to strengthen important neural connections. These changes were accompanied by significant deficits in social recognition memory.
Overall, the findings demonstrated that sleep deprivation impairs both brain function and behavior through specific neural circuits.
Targeted effects on memory circuits
The researchers also found that administering caffeine before sleep deprivation restored synaptic transmission in the CA2 region and returned plasticity to normal levels.
As a result, the social memory deficit caused by sleep deprivation was improved. Importantly, the effects of caffeine are highly selective. Rather than broadly increasing activity throughout the brain, they specifically restored disrupted pathways associated with social memory.
This targeted behavior meant that animals in the control group, which did not experience sleep deprivation, showed no signs of excessive nerve stimulation despite consuming caffeine.
“Sleep deprivation doesn’t just make you tired; it selectively disrupts important memory circuits,” Dr. Wong points out. “We found that caffeine can reverse these disruptions at both the molecular and behavioral levels. Caffeine’s ability to do so suggests that its benefits may go beyond simply helping you feel alert.”
Associate Professor Sajikumar added: “Our findings place the CA2 region as an important hub linking sleep and social memory. This study strengthens our understanding of the biological mechanisms underlying sleep-related cognitive decline. This may inform future approaches to preserving cognitive performance.”
Implications for brain health and future research
The findings highlight the important role sleep plays in maintaining healthy cognition and memory. By showing that caffeine can restore specific neural pathways affected by sleep deprivation, this study provides new insights into potential targeted approaches to combating cognitive decline.
The researchers plan to continue investigating how caffeine affects memory consolidation and memory recall. Future studies will also use targeted manipulation of brain circuits to better understand the causal relationships between neural pathways and memory function.

