Chronic drinking can disrupt body clock
August 25th, 2010 - 1:00 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 25 (ANI): A study has found a link between dysregulation of circadian clock genes and chronic drinking in humans.
Circadian rhythmicity is regulated by circadian clock genes, and animal studies have shown that chronic drinking can alter expressions in these genes.
The new study has found that significantly lower levels of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) - a molecule of RNA that helps to manufacture proteins - in circadian clock genes in alcohol-dependent (AD) patients support a relationship between circadian clock gene dysregulation and drinking in humans.
“The body’s daily biological, or circadian, rhythms modulate our physiological functions and related behaviors such as body temperature, hormone secretions, and sleep/wake cycle,” said Sy-Jye Leu, a researcher with the Taipei Medical University and corresponding author for the study.
“Circadian rhythms are the outward manifestation of an internal timing system which is driven by several genetic elements, what we call circadian clock genes.”
The appropriate expression or regulation of these genes is necessary for any organism to efficiently “program” physiological and behavioral activities in order to ensure survival, she said.
Chian-Jue Kuo, attending psychiatrist and assistant professor at Taipei City Hospital, said: “AD is related to circadian rhythm dysfunction such as sleep problems and mood changes. This study is important because the authors used a clinical sample, instead of animal models, to look into circadian dysregulation in AD patients.”
Leu said: “Previous studies had demonstrated that alcohol could directly disrupt … neuronal transmission in the brain. This would, in turn, influence the activity of circadian clock genes and disturb circadian rhythm-related responses. Assessing the levels of mRNA offers a direct measurement of gene expression of the circadian clock genes, and we can simultaneously assess nearly all of them.”
Leu and her colleagues examined blood samples from 22 male patients who met the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Fourth Edition criteria for AD, as well as 12 healthy “control” subjects for comparison.
Results showed markedly lower baseline mRNA levels of the target circadian clock genes in the AD patients than in the control subjects, which indicates an overall lowering of circadian clock gene expression in individuals with chronic drinking.
“In other words, chronic alcohol consumption was associated with a destruction of normal circadian clock gene expression. This altered expression is closely related to circadian rhythm dysfunction and might link to a variety of physiological problems such as sleep/wake cycle dysregulation, depression, and even cancer,” said Leu.
The results will be published in the November 2010 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. (ANI)
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Tags: animal models, animal studies, body clock, body temperature, circadian clock, circadian rhythms, clock gene, clock genes, dysregulation, gene expression, genetic elements, leu, medical university, messenger ribonucleic acid, mood changes, physiological functions, rhythmicity, secretions, sleep problems, taipei city