Tuesday May 22nd 2012
Neuroscience News on Google Plus Neuroscience News On Twitter Neuroscience News on Facebook

Disruption of Biological Clocks Causes Neurodegeneration, Early Death

New research at Oregon State University provides evidence for the first time that disruption of circadian rhythms – the biological “clocks” found in many animals – can clearly cause accelerated neurodegeneration, loss of motor function and premature death.

The study was published in Neurobiology of Disease and done by researchers at OSU and Oregon Health and Science University. Prior to this, it wasn’t clear which came first – whether the disruption of biological clock mechanisms was the cause or the result of neurodegeneration.

“In these experiments, we showed through both environmental and genetic approaches that disrupting the biological clock accelerated these health problems,” said Kuntol Rakshit, an OSU graduate fellow.

“There’s a great deal of interest right now in studies on circadian rhythms, as we learn more about the range of problems that can result when they are disrupted,” Rakshit said. “Ultimately we hope that this research will be taken from the laboratory to the bedside.”

These studies were done with fruit flies, but the OSU scientists said previous research has indicated there are close parallels between them and humans. Some of the genes regulating circadian rhythms in flies are so important that they have been preserved through millions of years of separate evolution and still do the same thing in humans.

The biological clock, in humans and many other animals, is a complex genetic mechanism tuned to the 24-hour day and regular cycles of light, dark and sleep. It influences a wide range of biological processes, from fertility to hormone production, feeding patterns, DNA repair, sleep, stress reactions, even the effectiveness of medications. In humans, researchers have found strong correlations between disrupted clock mechanisms, aging, and neurologic diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s disease.

The fruit flies used in this research carried two mutations, one that disrupts circadian rhythms and another that causes flies to develop brain pathologies during aging. These double mutants had a 32-50 percent shorter lifespan, lost much of their motor function, and developed significant “vacuoles” or holes in their brains far sooner than flies with a functional clock.

The decline and loss of clock function may be just the beginning of a damaging, circular process, said Jadwiga Giebultowicz, an OSU professor of zoology, member of the OSU Center for Healthy Aging Research and project leader.

“When the biological clock begins to fail, rhythms that regulate cell function and health get disrupted, and we now know that this predisposes the brain to neurodegeneration,” Giebultowicz said. “But that neurodegeneration, in turn, may cause more damage to the clock function.

“A healthy biological clock helps protect against this damage,” she said. “When the clock fails, the damage processes speed up.”

Aging is closely associated with this process, Giebultowicz said, but it’s not clear exactly how. Molecular clock oscillations decline during aging. Finding ways to restore them might form a possible therapy for biological clock damage and help to prevent disease, and work in that area will be part of future research.

Notes about this circadian clock research article

This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Program, or IGERT in Aging Sciences at OSU, a program of the National Science Foundation. Collaborators included Doris Kretzschmar, a professor at Oregon Health and Science University, who specializes in the use of flies as models for human neurodegenerative disease.

Contact: David Stauth – Oregon State University
Source: Jadwiga Giebultowicz & Kuntol Rakshit – Oregon State University press release
Image Source: Neuroscience image adapted from Flickr photo shared by Oregon State University
Original Research: Oregon State library information and PDF for “Loss of circadian clock accelerates aging in neurodegeneration-prone mutants” by Natraj Krishnan, Kuntol Rakshit, Eileen S. Chow, Jill S. Wentzell, Doris Kretzschmar and Jadwiga M. Giebultowicz.

Holes in the brain are shown with arrows pointing to them.
An increased number of "vacuoles," or holes in the brain, indicate neuronal damage and appear in fruit flies with disrupted biological clocks. (Photo courtesy of Oregon State University)

Related Neuroscience Articles

8 Comments for “Disruption of Biological Clocks Causes Neurodegeneration, Early Death”


Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Related Articles

Von Economo Neurons Discovered In Macaque Monkey Insular Cortex
Von Economo Neurons Discovered In Macaque Monkey Insular Cortex

Rare Neurons Discovered in Monkey Brains Max Planck scientists discover brain cells in monkeys that may be linked to [Read More]

Oxytocin Could Help Improve Processing Social Information in Children With Autism
Oxytocin Could Help Improve Processing Social Information in Children With Autism

Oxytocin Improves Brain Function in Children with Autism Preliminary results from an ongoing, large-scale study by Yale [Read More]

Paralyzed Individuals Use Thought Controlled Robotic Arm to Reach and Grasp
Paralyzed Individuals Use Thought Controlled Robotic Arm to Reach and Grasp

NIH-funded study shows progress in brain-computer interface technology. In an ongoing clinical trial, a paralyzed woman [Read More]

Sugar Makes You Stupid: Study Shows High Fructose Diet Sabotages Learning and Memory
Sugar Makes You Stupid: Study Shows High Fructose Diet Sabotages Learning and Memory

This is your brain on sugar: UCLA study shows high-fructose diet sabotages learning, memory. Attention, college [Read More]

Surgeons Restore Some Hand Function to Quadriplegic Patient
Surgeons Restore Some Hand Function to Quadriplegic Patient

Technique could help those with C6, C7 spinal cord injuries. Surgeons at Washington University School of Medicine in [Read More]

Neuroscience Jobs

  1. Submit an article, personal story, question, blog post or a news tip from this area. Submissions are welcome from everyone. Scientists, patients, students, doctors, neuroscience geeks, researchers, bloggers, etc. are all welcome to share their opinions about neuroscience. As long as it pertains to neuroscience related information, and isn't overly offensive to nearly everyone that could read it, we will post it. Credit will be given to the submitter unless asked not to in the text area. We'll contact you in the email provided to ask, or answer any questions. We look forward to your Neuroscience News contribution.