Yao Yifan, Silver Rae
Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York City, NY, United States.
Department of Neuroscience, Barnard College, New York City, NY, United States.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2022 Jun 1;16:877256. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.877256. eCollection 2022.
Steroids are lipid hormones that reach bodily tissues through the systemic circulation, and play a major role in reproduction, metabolism, and homeostasis. All of these functions and steroids themselves are under the regulation of the circadian timing system (CTS) and its cellular/molecular underpinnings. In health, cells throughout the body coordinate their daily activities to optimize responses to signals from the CTS and steroids. Misalignment of responses to these signals produces dysfunction and underlies many pathologies.
To explore relationships between the CTS and circulating steroids, we examine the brain clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the daily fluctuations in plasma steroids, the mechanisms producing regularly recurring fluctuations, and the actions of steroids on their receptors within the SCN. The goal is to understand the relationship between temporal control of steroid secretion and how rhythmic changes in steroids impact the SCN, which in turn modulate behavior and physiology.
The CTS is a multi-level organization producing recurrent feedback loops that operate on several time scales. We review the evidence showing that the CTS modulates the timing of secretions from the level of the hypothalamus to the steroidogenic gonadal and adrenal glands, and at specific sites within steroidogenic pathways. The SCN determines the timing of steroid hormones that then act on their cognate receptors within the brain clock. In addition, some compartments of the body-wide CTS are impacted by signals derived from food, stress, exercise etc. These in turn act on steroidogenesis to either align or misalign CTS oscillators. Finally this review provides a comprehensive exploration of the broad contribution of steroid receptors in the SCN and how these receptors in turn impact peripheral responses.
The hypothesis emerging from the recognition of steroid receptors in the SCN is that mutual shaping of responses occurs between the brain clock and fluctuating plasma steroid levels.
类固醇是通过体循环到达身体组织的脂质激素,在生殖、代谢和体内平衡中起主要作用。所有这些功能以及类固醇本身都受昼夜节律系统(CTS)及其细胞/分子基础的调节。在健康状态下,全身的细胞协调它们的日常活动,以优化对CTS和类固醇信号的反应。对这些信号的反应失调会导致功能障碍,并成为许多疾病的基础。
为了探索CTS与循环类固醇之间的关系,我们研究了位于视交叉上核(SCN)的脑时钟、血浆类固醇的每日波动、产生规律性反复波动的机制以及类固醇对其在SCN内受体的作用。目标是了解类固醇分泌的时间控制与类固醇的节律性变化如何影响SCN之间的关系,而SCN又反过来调节行为和生理。
CTS是一个多层次的组织,产生在多个时间尺度上运行的反复反馈回路。我们综述了证据,表明CTS调节从下丘脑水平到类固醇生成性腺和肾上腺以及类固醇生成途径内特定部位的分泌时间。SCN决定类固醇激素的分泌时间,然后这些激素作用于脑时钟内的同源受体。此外,全身CTS的一些部分受到来自食物、压力、运动等信号的影响。这些信号反过来作用于类固醇生成,使CTS振荡器对齐或失调。最后,本综述全面探讨了类固醇受体在SCN中的广泛作用以及这些受体如何反过来影响外周反应。
从在SCN中识别类固醇受体中得出的假设是,脑时钟和波动的血浆类固醇水平之间会发生相互塑造的反应。