The gene Disrupted in Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1) is linked to a range of psychiatric disorders. Two recent transgenic studies suggest DISC1 is also involved in homeostatic sleep regulation. Several strains of inbred mice commonly used for genome manipulation experiments, including several Swiss and likely all 129 substrains, carry a natural deletion mutation of Disc1. This constitutes a potential confound for studying sleep in genetically modified mice. Since disturbed sleep can also influence psychiatric and neurodegenerative disease models, this putative confound might affect a wide range of studies in several fields. Therefore, we asked to what extent the natural Disc1 deletion affects sleep. To this end, we first compared sleep and electroencephalogram (EEG) phenotypes of 129S4 mice carrying the Disc1 deletion and C57BL/6N mice carrying the full-length version. We then bred Disc1 from C57BL/6N into the 129S4 background, resulting in S4-Disc1 mice. The differences between 129S4 and C57BL/6N were not detected in the 129S4 to S4-Disc1 comparison. We conclude that the mutation has no effect on the measured sleep and EEG characteristics. Thus, it is unlikely the widespread Disc1 deletion has led to spurious results in previous sleep studies or that it alters sleep in mouse models of psychiatric or neurodegenerative diseases.Many psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, major depression, and bipolar disorder, are accompanied by pronounced sleep abnormalities 1, 2 . This was long viewed as a secondary effect downstream of the primary disorder. However, recent evidence suggests that the relation is bidirectional, i.e. sleep problems exacerbate psychiatric diseases [3][4][5][6] . The cause for the high rate of co-occurrence of psychiatric disorders and sleep abnormalities is unknown, but a common genetic predisposition might increase the risk for both 3-5, 7, 8 . A Scottish pedigree with high prevalence of psychiatric disease carries a mutated gene associated with schizophrenia, major depression and bipolar disorder 9 . The gene, known as Disrupted in Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1) encodes an intracellular scaffold protein known to play a role in neuronal development and synaptic function 10 . A role for Disc1 in sleep regulation was suggested in two transgenic studies ectopically expressing human DISC1. In flies human DISC1 caused increased total sleep and increased sleep bout duration whereas in mice it caused increased wakefulness and decreased sleep 11,12 . Although these two reports seem contradictory, it should be noted that flies lack a native Disc1 gene and the transgenic mice expressed both human and mouse Disc1 and that the measurement techniques for flies and mice are necessarily different. Nonetheless, these reports indicate that expression of DISC1 related genes can alter sleep.In contrast to most inbred mouse strains such as C57BL/6, several strains including "Swiss" strains (e.g. FVB, SJL, SWR), and all 129 substrains naturally carry a 25 base pair deletion mutation in exon 6 of Disc1 13-15 . Importantly...