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Bright light preference disrupts mouse sleep patterns even without human lifestyle factors

April 13, 2026 Circadian Biology Newsletter Issue #32

This week brought fascinating insights into how our internal clocks work—from the brain circuits that time our stress hormones to why bright lights at night mess with our sleep, even in mice who don't have smartphones or late-night Netflix binges.

🐭 Mice Choose Bright Light and Pay the Sleep Price

  • Day-active striped mice (Rhabdomys pumilio) naturally learn to control their own lighting and develop a clear preference: darkness during rest periods and the brightest available light during active periods

  • When given access to self-selected light, the mice experienced disrupted sleep patterns, increased dark-phase activity, and delayed re-entrainment to new light cycles—even though they lack human motivations for consuming light

  • The findings suggest that intrinsic relationships between light, arousal, and circadian clocks may be a fundamental biological origin for how artificial light disrupts sleep

Why it matters: This study shows that even without work schedules, social media, or entertainment driving light exposure, the basic biology of light preference can disrupt circadian rhythms—suggesting our modern lighting problems may run deeper than just lifestyle choices.

🔗 Current biology : CB Journal Article 🗓️ Apr 8

Key Findings

🧠 Scientists Map the Daily Stress Hormone Circuit

  • Researchers traced the complete brain pathway that creates the daily surge in stress hormones (corticosteroids) several hours before animals become active

  • The circuit flows from the master clock (suprachiasmatic nucleus) to the subparaventricular zone, then to the dorsomedial hypothalamus, which uses both excitatory and inhibitory signals to activate stress hormone release

  • This daily stress hormone rhythm is temporally linked but phase-advanced compared to the main circadian clock activity

💡 Understanding this circuit could help explain how chronic stress disrupts our daily rhythms and point to new targets for treating stress-related disorders.
🥈 Top 2% journal 🔗 Nature communications Journal Article 🗓️ Apr 7

🍽️ Tiny Dopamine Population Controls Food Anticipation Movement

  • Deleting a key gene from just 25% of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra nearly eliminated anticipatory locomotion in mice expecting daily meals

  • Surprisingly, these mice retained food-seeking behavior but failed to express the motor activity typically seen before feeding time

  • This reveals a genetic separation between the internal timekeeping of food anticipation and the physical expression of that anticipation

💡 This finding suggests that circadian prediction and behavioral output involve distinct neural pathways, which could inform treatments for eating disorders or metabolic conditions.

🌙 Wake-Up Stroke Patients Show Broken Melatonin Rhythms

  • Patients who had strokes during sleep (wake-up strokes) showed complete loss of melatonin rhythm and a 3-hour delay in cortisol patterns, compared to normal rhythms in other stroke patients and controls

  • Both stroke groups lost normal blood pressure and heart rate rhythms, and none showed rhythmic expression of 6 key circadian clock genes

  • The study included 28 participants with blood samples collected every 6 hours over 24 hours to map their circadian patterns

💡 Disrupted circadian rhythms may play a specific role in strokes that occur during sleep, potentially opening doors for light therapy or other rhythm-based interventions.
Top 50% journal 🔗 Adv Clin Exp Med Journal Article 🗓️ Apr 7

🤱 Fetal Clocks Sync Up with Mom Before Birth

  • Mouse fetuses develop their own circadian rhythms in utero, with daily peaks in the clock protein PER2 that gradually stabilize to early night by day 15.5 of pregnancy

  • Pregnancies without detectable daily PER2 variation were more likely to fail, suggesting circadian rhythms may be important for pregnancy success

  • Maternal stress hormone injections could shift fetal circadian rhythms, indicating that glucocorticoids may help synchronize mother and baby's clocks before birth

💡 This suggests our biological clocks begin ticking and syncing with our mothers while we're still in the womb, which could influence lifelong circadian health.
🔗 Journal of biological rhythms Journal Article 🗓️ Apr 10

🧬 Astrocyte Clocks Control Brain Scaffolding and Learning

  • Deleting the core clock gene BMAL1 from astrocytes (brain support cells) disrupted the daily rhythm of perineuronal nets—protective structures around neurons that regulate synaptic function

  • These astrocyte clock-deficient mice had stronger synapses but impaired long-term potentiation and performed worse on learning and memory tasks

  • The study links astrocyte circadian clocks to extracellular matrix production and synaptic plasticity for the first time

💡 Astrocyte clocks may be crucial for maintaining the brain's structural scaffolding and learning capacity, suggesting new targets for cognitive enhancement.

💡 Simple Light Cycling Works as Well as Complex Hospital Interventions

  • A meta-analysis of 41 studies with 2,548 critically ill babies and children found that circadian interventions significantly improved heart rate, breathing, oxygen levels, and sleep duration

  • Surprisingly, simple single interventions like light cycling produced similar benefits to complex multicomponent bundles across all measured outcomes

  • 81.2% of studies using narrative analysis reported positive outcomes from circadian interventions in intensive care units

💡 Hospitals may be able to improve patient outcomes with relatively simple lighting changes rather than complex intervention packages.
Top 20% journal 🔗 Frontiers in neurology Systematic Review 🗓️ Apr 10

Implications

This week's research reveals how deeply circadian biology is woven into everything from brain development to disease recovery. Whether it's mice naturally choosing disruptive bright light or astrocytes orchestrating learning through daily rhythms, these findings suggest our internal clocks are both more fundamental and more fragile than previously understood.

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