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Your hair can reveal your circadian rhythm from a single sample

March 30, 2026 Circadian Biology Newsletter Issue #30

This week brought fascinating insights into how our internal clocks shape everything from cancer symptoms to athletic performance—and scientists just figured out how to read your circadian rhythm from a strand of hair.

🧬 Scientists develop HairTime: Reading your body clock from a single hair sample

Researchers developed HairTime, a noninvasive test that estimates your circadian phase from just one daytime hair sample—no more complicated sleep lab visits required.

  • The test showed strong accuracy when compared to the gold standard dim-light melatonin onset (DLMO) test across over 4,000 samples

  • People with earlier work schedules showed earlier internal timing on work days, suggesting societal factors can shift our internal rhythms

  • Hair-based circadian phase estimates followed a normal distribution across the population and varied by age and sex

Why it matters: Current circadian phase testing requires controlled lab conditions and multiple samples over time. A simple hair test could revolutionize personalized medicine by making it practical to tailor treatments to individual body clocks.

🔗 Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Journal Article 🗓️ Mar 25

Key Findings

🌙 Cancer symptoms follow a daily pattern—and it's driven by disrupted clocks

  • Patients with malignant tumors experience symptom fluctuations following the pattern "mild in the morning, stable by day, worsening in the evening, and severe at night"

  • Disruptions in core circadian clock genes like BMAL1 and PER, combined with dysregulated cellular metabolism and immune responses, facilitate tumor growth and metastasis during nighttime hours

  • These molecular changes contribute to symptom worsening through direct tumor invasion, neural infiltration, inflammatory processes, and abnormal melatonin secretion

💡 Understanding daily symptom patterns could help time cancer treatments for maximum effectiveness and minimum side effects.
Top 20% journal 🔗 Journal of Cancer Review 🗓️ Mar 23

⚽ Jet lag hits athletes harder when traveling east vs west

  • Analysis of 89 studies found that eastward travel generally causes stronger circadian disruption and impairs aerobic capacity, coordination, and technical performance

  • Westward travel often induces greater fatigue and more severely affects team-sport outcomes

  • Travel effects included sleep disturbances (36 studies), fatigue (25 studies), decreased physical performance (18 studies), and mood changes (15 studies)

💡 Athletes and coaches may need different recovery strategies depending on travel direction, with eastward trips requiring more aggressive countermeasures.
Top 20% journal 🔗 Sports (Basel, Switzerland) Review 🗓️ Mar 27

📱 Fitbit data reveals six key sleep dimensions in adolescents

  • Researchers identified six distinct sleep health dimensions from 3,393 young adolescents using Fitbit data: irregularity, timing, social jetlag, duration, weekend oversleep, and continuity

  • Greater sleep irregularity was linked to more mental health symptoms across all categories, while shorter sleep duration was associated with attention and psychotic symptoms one year later

  • Sleep irregularity and duration emerged as the most important dimensions for predicting mental health outcomes in teens

💡 Wearable devices could provide an accessible way to monitor sleep health in adolescents and identify those at risk for mental health problems.
🥇 Top 1% journal 🔗 JAMA pediatrics Journal Article 🗓️ Mar 23

🧠 Evening chronotype linked to worse psoriasis severity

  • Among 213 adults with psoriasis, those with evening chronotypes had the highest disease severity scores (11.1 ± 6.3), far exceeding morning types (1.7 ± 1.1) and intermediate types (3.9 ± 1.2)

  • Poor sleepers (sleep quality score > 5) had significantly higher psoriasis severity than good sleepers (10.3 ± 6.51 vs 2.3 ± 1.6)

  • Evening chronotype showed the strongest independent association with disease severity, explaining 81% of the variance in psoriasis scores

💡 Assessing sleep patterns and chronotype could help dermatologists identify psoriasis patients who need more aggressive treatment approaches.
🎖️ Top 10% journal 🔗 Frontiers in endocrinology Journal Article 🗓️ Mar 27

🔬 Aging disrupts the anti-phase relationship between core clock genes

  • In 24-month-old mice, the normal opposing rhythms between core clock genes BMAL1 and PER2 became disrupted, with senescence-associated genes showing pronounced daily oscillations

  • Two distinct cell populations emerged that lacked normal BMAL1-PER2 relationships: one senescent-like and another profibrotic

  • Aging increased transcriptional noise particularly in circadian-regulated pathways like RNA splicing, ribosome biogenesis, and metabolic signaling

💡 Circadian disruption may be both a cause and consequence of cellular aging, suggesting new therapeutic targets for age-related diseases.

💊 Circadian timing affects how stem cells respond to regenerative therapies

  • Core circadian clock components directly control stem cell pathways through transcriptional regulation, shared enhancer architecture, and rhythmic protein modifications

  • Disruption of circadian-stem cell crosstalk impairs tissue maintenance, reduces regenerative responses, and may promote tumor formation

  • Stem cell populations across tissues show circadian oscillations that influence their self-renewal, proliferation, and differentiation capabilities

💡 Timing regenerative therapies to match patients' circadian rhythms could improve treatment effectiveness and safety.
🥉 Top 5% journal 🔗 Stem cell research & therapy Journal Article 🗓️ Mar 23

Implications

This week's research reveals how deeply our circadian clocks influence health and disease—from cancer symptom timing to athletic recovery to skin conditions. The development of simple tools like hair-based circadian testing could make personalized chronotherapy a reality, allowing doctors to time treatments when our bodies are most receptive.

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