Abstract

The effectiveness and toxicity of many drugs vary depending on the relationship between the dosing schedule and the 24-hour rhythms of biochemical, physiological and behavioral processes. In addition, several drugs can cause alterations to the 24-hour rhythms leading to illness and altered homeostatic regulation. However, the mechanisms of this drug-based disruption of circadian 'clock' genes remain unclear. Here, we show the disruptive effect of interferon-alpha on the rhythm of locomotor activity, body temperature and clock-gene mRNA expression in the periphery and suprachiasmatic nuclei, a primary circadian pacemaker. The rhythmicity of clock genes and the photic induction of the Per gene in suprachiasmatic nuclei were disturbed by the repetitive administration of interferon-alpha. Moreover, alteration of clock function, a new concept of adverse effects, can be overcome by optimizing the dosing schedule to minimize adverse drug effects.

Keywords

Suprachiasmatic nucleusCircadian rhythmDosingCLOCKBiologyChronobiologyCircadian clockRhythmPharmacologyNeuroscienceInternal medicineMedicine

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBiological ClocksBody TemperatureDNA-Binding ProteinsGene Expression RegulationInterferon-Stimulated Gene Factor 3Interferon-Stimulated Gene Factor 3gamma SubunitInterferon-alphaMaleMiceMiceInbred ICRMotor ActivityNuclear ProteinsPeriod Circadian ProteinsRNAMessengerReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionSuprachiasmatic NucleusTranscription Factors

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
7
Issue
3
Pages
356-360
Citations
205
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

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205
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8
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179
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Cite This

Shigehiro Ohdo, Satoru Koyanagi, Hinako Suyama et al. (2001). Changing the dosing schedule minimizes the disruptive effects of interferon on clock function. Nature Medicine , 7 (3) , 356-360. https://doi.org/10.1038/85507

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/85507
PMID
11231636

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%