Entrainment of the mouse circadian clock by sub-acute physical and psychological stress
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2015 papers
Abstract
The effects of acute stress on the peripheral circadian system are not well understood in vivo. Here, we show that sub-acute stress caused by restraint or social defeat potently altered clock gene expression in the peripheral tissues of mice. In these peripheral tissues, as well as the hippocampus and cortex, stressful stimuli induced time-of-day-dependent phase-advances or -delays in rhythmic clock gene expression patterns; however, such changes were not observed in the suprachiasmatic nucleus, i.e. the central circadian clock. Moreover, several days of stress exposure at the beginning of the light period abolished circadian oscillations and caused internal desynchronisation of peripheral clocks. Stress-induced changes in circadian rhythmicity showed habituation and disappeared with long-term exposure to repeated stress. These findings suggest that sub-acute physical/psychological stress potently entrains peripheral clocks and causes transient dysregulation of circadian clocks in vivo.
Related Papers
- → Melatonin directly resets the rat suprachiasmatic circadian clock in vitro(1991)314 cited
- → Antibodies for Assessing Circadian Clock Proteins in the Rodent Suprachiasmatic Nucleus(2012)28 cited
- → Light-induced gene expression in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of young and aging rats(1993)84 cited
- → The eyes suppress a circadian rhythm of FOS expression in the suprachiasmatic nucleus in the absence of light(2003)16 cited
- → The circadian molecular clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus is necessary but not sufficient for fear entrainment in the mouse(2023)