Francis T Chase, Porcu Alessandra
Department of Drug Discovery and Biomedical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, United States.
Front Mol Neurosci. 2023 Jun 27;16:1188184. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2023.1188184. eCollection 2023.
Circadian rhythms are self-sustained oscillations of biological systems that allow an organism to anticipate periodic changes in the environment and optimally align feeding, sleep, wakefulness, and the physiological and biochemical processes that support them within the 24 h cycle. These rhythms are generated at a cellular level by a set of genes, known as clock genes, which code for proteins that inhibit their own transcription in a negative feedback loop and can be perturbed by stress, a risk factor for the development of mood and anxiety disorders. A role for circadian clocks in mood and anxiety has been suggested for decades on the basis of clinical observations, and the dysregulation of circadian rhythms is a prominent clinical feature of stress-related disorders. Despite our understanding of central clock structure and function, the effect of circadian dysregulation in different neuronal subtypes in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the master pacemaker region, as well as other brain systems regulating mood, including mesolimbic and limbic circuits, is just beginning to be elucidated. In the brain, circadian clocks regulate neuronal physiological functions, including neuronal activity, synaptic plasticity, protein expression, and neurotransmitter release which in turn affect mood-related behaviors via cell-type specific mechanisms. Both animal and human studies have revealed an association between circadian misalignment and mood disorders and suggest that internal temporal desynchrony might be part of the etiology of psychiatric disorders. To date, little work has been conducted associating mood-related phenotypes to cell-specific effects of the circadian clock disruptions. In this review, we discuss existing literature on how clock-driven changes in specific neuronal cell types might disrupt phase relationships among cellular communication, leading to neuronal circuit dysfunction and changes in mood-related behavior. In addition, we examine cell-type specific circuitry underlying mood dysfunction and discuss how this circuitry could affect circadian clock. We provide a focus for future research in this area and a perspective on chronotherapies for mood and anxiety disorders.
昼夜节律是生物系统的自我维持振荡,使生物体能够预测环境中的周期性变化,并在24小时周期内最佳地协调进食、睡眠、清醒以及支持它们的生理和生化过程。这些节律在细胞水平上由一组称为时钟基因的基因产生,这些基因编码的蛋白质在负反馈回路中抑制自身转录,并且可能受到应激的干扰,应激是情绪和焦虑障碍发展的一个风险因素。基于临床观察,几十年来一直有人提出昼夜节律时钟在情绪和焦虑中发挥作用,昼夜节律失调是应激相关障碍的一个突出临床特征。尽管我们对中枢时钟的结构和功能有所了解,但昼夜节律失调在视交叉上核(SCN)这一主起搏器区域的不同神经元亚型以及其他调节情绪的脑系统(包括中脑边缘和边缘回路)中的作用才刚刚开始被阐明。在大脑中,昼夜节律时钟调节神经元的生理功能,包括神经元活动、突触可塑性、蛋白质表达和神经递质释放,这些反过来又通过细胞类型特异性机制影响与情绪相关的行为。动物和人类研究都揭示了昼夜节律失调与情绪障碍之间的关联,并表明内部时间不同步可能是精神疾病病因的一部分。迄今为止,很少有工作将与情绪相关的表型与昼夜节律时钟破坏的细胞特异性效应联系起来。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了现有文献,即特定神经元细胞类型中由时钟驱动的变化如何可能破坏细胞间通讯中的相位关系,导致神经回路功能障碍和与情绪相关行为的变化。此外,我们研究了情绪功能障碍背后的细胞类型特异性回路,并讨论了该回路如何影响昼夜节律时钟。我们为该领域的未来研究提供了一个重点,并对情绪和焦虑障碍的时间疗法提出了一个观点。