| Literature DB >> 33889597 |
Bethany Carter1, Hannah S Justin1, Danielle Gulick1,2, Joshua J Gamsby1,2.
Abstract
Circadian rhythm dysfunction occurs in both common and rare neurodegenerative diseases. This dysfunction manifests as sleep cycle mistiming, alterations in body temperature rhythms, and an increase in symptomatology during the early evening hours known as Sundown Syndrome. Disruption of circadian rhythm homeostasis has also been implicated in the etiology of neurodegenerative disease. Indeed, individuals exposed to a shifting schedule of sleep and activity, such as health care workers, are at a higher risk. Thus, a bidirectional relationship exists between the circadian system and neurodegeneration. At the heart of this crosstalk is the molecular circadian clock, which functions to regulate circadian rhythm homeostasis. Over the past decade, this connection has become a focal point of investigation as the molecular clock offers an attractive target to combat both neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis and circadian rhythm dysfunction, and a pivotal role for neuroinflammation and stress has been established. This review summarizes the contributions of molecular clock dysfunction to neurodegenerative disease etiology, as well as the mechanisms by which neurodegenerative diseases affect the molecular clock.Entities:
Keywords: circadian; dementia; neurodegeneration; proteinopathy; stress
Year: 2021 PMID: 33889597 PMCID: PMC8056266 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2021.644747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
FIGURE 1The mammalian molecular clock. A summary of the functionality of the mammalian core clock components that are impacted by neurodegenerative disease or play a role in pathogenesis.
FIGURE 2BMAL1 knockout mouse model produces increased astrogliosis. Knock out of BMAL1 drives excess astrogliosis, contributing to the acceleration of AD pathogenesis by way of astrocyte malfunction. This malfunction produces a loss of neuroprotection and reduces the astrocyte’s ability to transport Aβ out of the cell. Without protection from astrocytes, neuroinflammation then drives excessive pro-inflammatory signaling and tau phosphorylation, while producing an increased quantity of NFT’s. AD pathogenesis has also been shown to increase circadian dysfunction which further perpetuates neuronal damage and death.
ND’s and ND Risk factors have been associated with the molecular clock in numerous studies.
| Studied ND/ND Risk factor | Clock Gene(s) examined | Model system(s) | Observations | Investigator | DOI |
| AD | BMAL1, CBP, PER2 | 5XFAD mouse; HT22 cells | BMAL1 and PER2 mRNA levels significantly altered abnormal oscillations in SCN of 5XFAD mice No significant changes in CBP mRNA levels Aβ induces BMAL1 and CBP degradation via SUMOylation Disruptions the oscillation of PER2 mRNA levels SUMO1 knockdown rescued BMAL1 degredation in cells | ||
| BMAL1, CLOCK, PER1, PER2 | Mesocricetus auratus | BMAL1 and CLOCK expression attenuated with age in the SCN PER1 and PER2 are not affected when housed in DD PER1 less susceptible to photic induction with age in DD | |||
| BMAL1 | Primary human fibroblasts; postmortem human AD brain samples; NIH3T3 cells | Rhythmic methylation of BMAL1 is altered in both AD brains and fibroblasts E4 treatment with either 5-Aza-2′ deoxycytidine (DNA methyltransferase inhibitor) or | |||
| BMAL1, PER2 | Mesocricetus auratus, Tg4510 mouse | Aging attenuates SCN BMAL1 expression but does not affect musculoskeletal BMAL1 levels Per2 mRNA had ↓ diurnal rhythms Altered hippocampal BMAL1 expression Altered hippocampal and hypothalamic Per2 expression | |||
| Ck1δ, Ck1ε, PER1 | APP-PS1 mouse | PER1 expression abnormally high in vehicle treated transgenic mice compared to controls Selective CK1i inhibitor PF-670462 produced dose dependent reduction of amyloid beta burden in both transgenic and non-transgenic mice PF-670462 ↓ tau plaque size PF-670462 rescued PER1 expression in transgenic mice PF-670462 improved period length and rescued some cognitive function | |||
| CK1δ/ε | Human subjects (post mortem brain samples) | CK1δ expression had 33-fold increase and CK1ε expression had a 9-fold increase in the CA1 region of the hippocampus Both CK1 isoforms colocalize in NFTs and neuritic plaques | |||
| Dblt, dClk | Spag knockdown lowers Dblt and increases period length Loss of function mutation in dClk; activation of Dronc Dronc mediated tau cleavage and ↑ neurodegeneration | ||||
| PER1, PER2 | C57BL/6 mouse | Aβ 31-35 alters PER1 and PER2 expression in both core clock tissue (SCN) and peripheral cardiovascular tissues | |||
| PER | PER expression is perturbed by ↑ β-cleavage of endogenous APPL Overexpression of APPL maintained robust circadian rhythms in aged flies PER KO flies had greater accumulation of oxidative damage Impaired antioxidative stress responses also ↑ circadian dysfunction, neurodegeneration, and shortened lifespans | ||||
| Rev-Erba | SAMP8 mice | Treatment with SR9009 injections ↓ AB levels in brains of treated mice, reversal of cognitive deficits, improved synaptic health and axoskeletal structure. | |||
| AD, aging | BMAL1, Ck1ε, CLOCK CRY1-2, PER1-3, RORα | 3 × Tg-AD mouse | All studied clock genes were affected by either aging or genotype Effects are highly differentiated | ||
| eval, pdf, PER, TIM | Pan-neuronal expression of Aβ causes progressive loss of circadian behavioral rhythmicity Entrainment of the central molecular clock by exposure to regular light-dark cycles, even in the face of behavioral arrhythmia, prolongs the flies’ lifespan | ||||
| PER | KO of PER does not affect Aβ mediated pathologies (neurodegeneration, motor dysfunction) Loss of rest/activity rhythms occurred while PER oscillations remained normal in Aβ expressing flies | ||||
| AD, PD, PSP, PiD | CK1δ | Human subjects | CK1δ associates with Pick bodies in PiD and Tau containing neurofibrilary tangles in the remaining two tauopathies | ||
| Aging, neuroinflammation, oxidative stress | BMAL1, CLOCK, NPAS2, PER1, PER2 | BMAL1±; NestinCre+; BMAL1f/f; CLOCK KO; NPAS2/CLOCK DKO; PER1m/PER2m mice | Ablation of BMAL1, CLOCK, NPAS2 caused severe reactive astrogliosis Ablation of BMAL1 led to degeneration of synaptic terminals, neuronal oxidative damage and impaired expression of several redox defense genes | ||
| BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, CRY2, PER1, PER2 | BMAL1–/– mouse; CRY1,2–/– mouse; CLOCK/CLOCK mouse | BMAL1 KO impairs PER and CRY expression, increases ROS production and leads to chronic oxidative stress in the brain BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, or CRY2 deficiency may alter habituation, exploratory activity, or open field behaviors | |||
| BMAL1 | BMAL1–/– mouse; L929 cells | Aged BMAL1 KO mice had age-dependent sarcopenia and bone loss, and ↑ ROS accumulation in various peripheral tissues which correlated with age-dependent degeneration Cells with suppressed BMAL1 expression had ↓ PER1 expression | |||
| dClck, PER, TIM | PER protein expression ↓ with age Expression of stress response genes is dependent on dClk | ||||
| Circadian Disruption | BMAL1, BMAL2 | BMAL2 transgenic mice (B2Tg) | Constitutive promoter expression of BMAL2 restores rhythmic locomotor activity and rhythmic metabolic processes in BMAL1 ablated mice | ||
| Dblt | Mutation of Dblt near phosphate recognition site or nuclear localization site shortens period length | ||||
| PER | Mutation in PER causes impaired short-term and 24 h memory performance, shortened sleep cycles, and long-term memory deficits | ||||
| HD | dClk, PER, TIM | Partial knockdown of dClk suppressed mutant Huntingtin protein aggregation, this effect lost in absence of PER PER expression ↓ during its normal peak hours PER and TIM had prolonged expression patterns | |||
| BMAL1, PER1-2 | R6/2 mouse | R6/2 mice have abnormally rapid clearance of PER1 and PER2 proteins SCN brain slices have normal circadian gene expression Alprazolam treatment resulted in ↑ PER2 mRNA levels and some improvements in motor function and survivability Hepatic BMAL1 and PER2 expression maintained rhythmicity, though PER2 expression was significantly phase advanced Hepatic CRY1 rhythmicity ablated Listed clock genes ↑ compared to the untreated R6/2 mutants with restricted feeding PER2 mRNA oscillations prematurely truncated during normal peak times These alterations accompanied disturbed circadian behavior and eventual total circadian disintegration | |||
| PD | BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, PER2, RORα | 6-OHDA treated rats (PD phenotype); 6-OHDA treated SH-SY5Y cells | BMAL1, PER2, and CLOCK mRNA levels ↓ and RORα mRNA levels ↑ in 6-OHDA rats 6-OHDA-treated cells showed ↓ mRNA levels of BMAL1, CLOCK, PER2, and RORα, lower BMAL1/Clock protein expression, and ↑ BMAL/Clock binding ratio BMAL1 acetylation ↑ in rats and cells treated with6-OHDA Acetylated BMAL1 levels, CRY1 and PER2 mRNA levels partially rescued by Resveratrol in cells | ||
| PER2 | ASO mouse | SCN PER2 expression normal SCN neurons had lower daytime firing rates Circadian locomotor activities degenerated with age Light adaptation response unaffected | |||
| BMAL1, PER2, Rev-Erbα | Human subjects | Peripheral BMAL1 expression had ↓ time-dependent variation Brief increase in PER2 and Rev-Erbα at 4 AM, but otherwise no significant variation | |||
| BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1-2, NPAS2, NR1D1, RORB | Human subjects | BMAL1 and PER1 significantly associated with PD risk SNPs in BMAL1 and PER1 also associated with PD | |||
| BMAL1-2, CLOCK, DEC1 | Leukocytes from human subjects | BMAL1 and BMAL2 ↓ in PD patients | |||
| BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1-2 NPAS2, PER1-2 | Leukocytes from human subjects |
NPAS2 promoter significantly hypomethylated in PD patients compared to healthy controls Both groups had some CRY1, insignificant BMAL1 methylation No detectable methylation in PER1, PER2, CRY2, and CLOCK promoters | |||
| BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1-2, PER1-3, | Fibroblasts from two human subjects (P1 and P2) | P1 fibroblasts had upregulated CLOCK, CRY1, and CRY2, expression and downregulated PER2 expression P2 fibroblasts downregulate PER3 and CRY2 CRY1, PER2, and PER3, had significant changes in oscillatory amplitude for both patients | |||
| PD, aging | BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, PER2, Rev-Erba, Rorα | C57BL/6 mouse; BSKO mouse; Sir2d mouse; BSTG mouse; N2a cells | BMAL1, PER2, and Sirt1 ↓ in SCN of aged C57 mice which caused light entrainment impairment, disrupted circadian behaviors, and longer periods BMAL1 and PER2 mRNA levels ↓ in Sirt1 KO mice (BSKO), behavioral disturbances observed in aged C57s, recapitulated in BSKOs BSTG mice had ↑ BMAL1 and PER2 levels All listed clock genes regulated by SIRT1 in N2a cells KO of SIRT1 | ||
| PD, neuroinflammation | BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, CRY2, DBP, PER1, PER2, Rev-ERB, Rorα | Sprague-Dawley rats treated with LPS (lipopolysaccharide), ROT (rotenone), or both to induce PD phenotype | LPS injected rats sustained dopaminergic neuron loss and severe neuroinflammation BMAL1 protein and mRNA expression ↓ in all groups CLOCK and NPAS2 mRNA levels ↓ in all groups PER1, PER2 ↓ in all groups CRY1 and CRY2 expressions not affected in any group REV-ERB α and RORα↓ in protein expression and mRNA levels in all groups | ||
| DLB | BMAL1, CLOCK, CRY1, CRY2, PER1, PER2, PER3, TIM, CK1ε | Leukocytes from human subjects | PER1 and CRY1 circadian genes methylated DLB patients had significantly ↑ gene methylation |
FIGURE 3Harmful positive feedback as a driver for neurodegeneration. Stress and toxic extracellular milieu produced by neuronal death drives a chronic inflammatory response, as well as further breakdown of circadian function in cells. There is a common link between neurodegenerative disease (ND) and overactivity of the immune system, which plays a key role in each of the ND’s described. These conditions result in not only increased cell death, but deregulation of protein folding, increased DNA damage, astrocyte malfunction, and increased Aβ burden. There is a common link between ND and overactivity of the immune system, which plays a key role in each of the ND’s described. Additionally, symptoms of circadian dysfunction are often reported in ND patients, suggesting that the pathology of the disease also drives further CD, creating a devastating circular relationship between CD and neuronal damage.