Cellular Circadian Clocks in Mood Disorders

Sep 27, 2012Journal of biological rhythms

Daily rhythms in cells linked to mood disorders

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Abstract

Defects in circadian rhythms related to body temperature and melatonin release have been observed in bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) patients.

  • Circadian clock dysfunction may play a role in the pathophysiology of BD and MDD.
  • The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is not the only area of interest; non-SCN cellular clocks in regions such as the lateral habenula and hippocampus may also influence mood regulation.
  • Imperfect indicators of SCN function have limited the understanding of its role in mood disorders.
  • Pathological genetic variants may encode traits associated with circadian clock dysfunction in non-SCN clocks among mood disorder patients.
  • New methodologies utilizing rhythmic clock gene expression reporters could provide more representative insights into the molecular mechanisms of mood regulation.

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