| Literature DB >> 26029154 |
Camille Saini1, Steven A Brown2, Charna Dibner1.
Abstract
Most light-sensitive organisms on earth have acquired an internal system of circadian clocks allowing the anticipation of light or darkness. In humans, the circadian system governs nearly all aspects of physiology and behavior. Circadian phenotypes, including chronotype, vary dramatically among individuals and over individual lifespan. Recent studies have revealed that the characteristics of human skin fibroblast clocks correlate with donor chronotype. Given the complexity of circadian phenotype assessment in humans, the opportunity to study oscillator properties by using cultured primary cells has the potential to uncover molecular details difficult to assess directly in humans. Since altered properties of the circadian oscillator have been associated with many diseases including metabolic disorders and cancer, clock characteristics assessed in additional primary cell types using similar technologies might represent an important tool for exploring the connection between chronotype and disease, and for diagnostic purposes. Here, we review implications of this approach for gathering insights into human circadian rhythms and their function in health and disease.Entities:
Keywords: bioluminescence; circadian clock; human chronotype; human primary cells; skin fibroblasts
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029154 PMCID: PMC4429585 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Studying peripheral oscillators in humans [adapted from Ref. (. The master clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the hypothalamus maintains phase coherence between peripheral oscillators present in virtually all cells of the body by means of daily synchronizing cues (hormonal signals, neuronal signals, rest/activity and feeding/fasting control, body temperature regulation). Circadian gene expression of different peripheral tissues, such as thyroid gland (68), skeletal muscle myotubes (Laurent Perrin and Charna Dibner, unpublished), pancreatic islets (69), or skin fibroblasts (61, 63), can be monitored in vitro in synchronized cultured cells from patients biopsies or donors samples using bioluminescent circadian reporters (Bmal1-luciferase in this scheme). Circadian properties of these oscillators (phase, period, amplitude, magnitude, resetting) can be analyzed to give subject-specific circadian phenotype information that might be included in diagnostic procedures in the near future.
Figure 2Disease-associated alterations of circadian function in human patients. (A) The amplitude of expression of Dbp after serum shock is reduced by 35% in fibroblasts from bipolar patients (BPI) as compared to healthy matched controls (MCs). Amplitude of rhythmic gene expression, defined at 12 h after serum shock for a series of individual gene (B) or overall relative expression levels of each individual genes (C) in fibroblasts from bipolar patients and age- and gender-matched unrelated controls. (D) Alterations of the expression of Bmal1 core-clock gene in tissue biopsies of follicular thyroid carcinoma and papillary thyroid carcinoma as compared to benign thyroid nodules (**P < 0.01) (A–C) were adapted from Ref. (73), and (D) was adapted from Ref. (68), with permissions.