| Literature DB >> 28360884 |
Gabrielle F Gloston1, Seung-Hee Yoo1, Zheng Jake Chen1.
Abstract
Normal physiological functions require a robust biological timer called the circadian clock. When clocks are dysregulated, misaligned, or dampened, pathological consequences ensue, leading to chronic diseases and accelerated aging. An emerging research area is the development of clock-targeting compounds that may serve as drug candidates to correct dysregulated rhythms and hence mitigate disease symptoms and age-related decline. In this review, we first present a concise view of the circadian oscillator, physiological networks, and regulatory mechanisms of circadian amplitude. Given a close association of circadian amplitude dampening and disease progression, clock-enhancing small molecules (CEMs) are of particular interest as candidate chronotherapeutics. A recent proof-of-principle study illustrated that the natural polymethoxylated flavonoid nobiletin directly targets the circadian oscillator and elicits robust metabolic improvements in mice. We describe mood disorders and aging as potential therapeutic targets of CEMs. Future studies of CEMs will shed important insight into the regulation and disease relevance of circadian clocks.Entities:
Keywords: aging; amplitude; circadian clock; metabolic disease; mood disorder; small molecules
Year: 2017 PMID: 28360884 PMCID: PMC5350099 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1The core circadian oscillator and regulatory molecules. The circadian clock oscillator is comprised of a network of transcriptional–translational feedback loops including the core loop (BMAL1/CLOCK/NPAS2 and PERs/CRYs), the stabilization loop (BMAL1/CLOCK, REV-ERBs, and RORs), and the auxiliary loop (DBP, E4BP4, REV-ERBs, and RORs). Various protein regulators (F-box-containing E3 ligases are shown as examples) and small-molecule modulators (nobiletin is shown) have been identified to target core clock components, regulating circadian periodicity and amplitude. See the main text for details.
Pharmacological treatments for mood disorders targeting the circadian system.
| Drug name | Therapeutic effect | Circadian target(s) | Circadian-related effect(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lithium | Mood stabilizer | GSK-3β | Lengthened circadian period; enhanced PER2 protein expression; and oscillatory amplitude | ( |
| Valproate | Mood stabilizer | Dopamine-mediated, possibly PER2 | Shortened circadian period of behavioral rhythms in DAT-KD mice and rhythms in suprachiasmatic nuclei explants from PER2:LUC mice | ( |
| Quetiapine | Mood stabilizer; adjunctive antidepressant; antipsychotic | Per1/2, Bmal1 | Enhanced Per1/2 mRNA at different ZTs in the mouse amygdala | ( |
| Carbamazepine | Mood-stabilizer | Undetermined | Shortened length of locomotor activity; stabilized running activity | ( |
| Fluoxetine | Antidepressant | Per2/3, Cry2, GSK-3β | Altered circadian period; enhanced hippocampal clock gene expression; altered phase re-entrainment | ( |
| Agomelatine | Antidepressant | MT1/2 receptors | Accelerated resynchronization of circadian rhythms; improved rest–activity cycle more than common antidepressant; entrained circadian rhythms; induced phase-shifts | ( |
| Ramelteon | Antidepressant | MT1/2 receptors | Phase advance | ( |
| Tasimelteon | Antidepressant | MT1/2 receptors | Phase advance/delay | ( |
Antidepressive and neuroprotective roles of nobiletin.
| Species | Treatment duration | Effect | Cellular effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse (despair model | 60 min prior to assay | Antidepressant | Monoamine upregulation | ( |
| Mouse | 11 days | Antidepressant; improved memory impairment | Activated ERK/MAP kinase-dependent signaling and increased CREB phosphorylation | ( |
| Mouse AD (APP-SL 7-5 Tg mice) | 4 months | Reduced Aβ plaque pathology; improved memory impairment | ERK phosphorylation; enhanced neprilysin activity | ( |
| Mouse AD (3XTg-AD) | 3 months | Improved cognitive impairment | Reduced soluble Aβ levels, reduced ROS levels in the hippocampus of WT and 3XTg-AD mice | ( |
| Mouse (senescence-accelerated mouse prone 8, SAMP8) | 2 months | Improved recognition and context-dependent fear memory | Restored decrease in GSH/GSSG ratio, increased antioxidant (GPx) enzyme activity, reversed tau phosphorylation at Ser202 and Thr231 | ( |
| MPTP-treated model mice | 14 days | Improved motor and cognitive deficits | Increased levels of CaMKII autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of DARPP-32 in the striatum and hippocampus; restored CaMKII- and cAMP kinase-dependent TH phosphorylation; enhanced dopamine release in striatum and hippocampus | ( |
Future studies are required to delineate the role of circadian clock in these efficacies.
FST, forced swim test; TST, tail suspension test.