Temperature as a circadian timing cue in the visually impaired.

4区 医学 Q3 Neuroscience
Progress in brain research Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-15 DOI:10.1016/bs.pbr.2025.02.004
Danny M Ball, Samantha S Mann, Nayantara Santhi, Maarten Speekenbrink, Vincent Walsh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The daily rise and fall in ambient temperature caused by Earth's 24-hour rotation may help regulate circadian rhythms in visually impaired individuals. In all mammals, circadian rhythms, the daily cycles of physiology and behavior, are time controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the brain's central clock. The SCN typically synchronizes circadian rhythms with the light/dark cycle through photoentrainment, a process in which specialized retinal cells capture ambient light and transmit this information to the SCN, allowing it to set its phase. Without light input, the rodent SCN's light-driven circuits can become desynchronized, potentially allowing alternative entrainment signals, such as ambient temperature, to influence central timing. Here, we consider whether a similar mechanism could benefit visually impaired humans who, due to retinal damage, have reduced or absent photic input to the central clock. Visually impaired individuals often experience circadian misalignment, whereby internal rhythms drift out of synchrony with the light-dark cycle, and we suggest that temperature information may mitigate some of this drift. Temperature entrainment could operate through heat shock pathways from the skin, via thermoregulatory brain regions with reciprocal connections to the SCN, or by shifting core body temperature through warm or cold baths, which can alter the phase of clocks in peripheral organs and potentially feedback to adjust central time. Given that temperature is a weaker cue than light, it remains unknown if, and to what extent, it may significantly impact central timing. However, if effective, temperature entrainment in the visually impaired could potentially improve circadian disorders, poor sleep, and adverse health outcomes associated with circadian dysfunction including depression, cognitive decline, and metabolic disorders, which are more prevalent in this population. Research is needed to confirm the long-term effectiveness of temperature as an entrainment cue in the visually impaired population, which may have broader implications for circadian timekeeping in mammals and the role of temperature in the absence of light.

温度是视障人士的昼夜节律提示。
地球24小时自转导致的环境温度每天的上升和下降可能有助于调节视障人士的昼夜节律。在所有哺乳动物中,昼夜节律,即生理和行为的日常循环,是由视交叉上核(SCN)控制的,即大脑的中央时钟。SCN通常通过光夹带使昼夜节律与光/暗周期同步,这是一个特殊的视网膜细胞捕获环境光并将该信息传递给SCN的过程,使其能够设置其相位。在没有光输入的情况下,啮齿动物的视神经网络的光驱动电路可能会变得不同步,从而可能允许其他干扰信号(如环境温度)影响中心时间。在这里,我们考虑类似的机制是否可以使视障人士受益,由于视网膜损伤,减少或缺乏对中央时钟的光输入。视力受损的人经常经历昼夜节律失调,因此内部节律与光暗周期不同步,我们认为温度信息可能会减轻这种漂移。温度携带可以通过来自皮肤的热休克途径,通过与SCN相互连接的温度调节脑区,或通过温水浴或冷水浴改变核心体温,这可以改变外周器官的时钟相位,并可能反馈调节中枢时间。考虑到温度是一个弱于光的线索,我们仍然不知道它是否,以及在多大程度上,会显著影响中枢时间。然而,如果有效的话,视障患者的体温调节可能会改善昼夜节律紊乱、睡眠不佳以及与昼夜节律紊乱相关的不良健康结果,包括抑郁症、认知能力下降和代谢紊乱,这些在视障人群中更为普遍。需要研究来证实温度作为视障人群的娱乐线索的长期有效性,这可能对哺乳动物的昼夜节律计时和温度在缺乏光线的情况下的作用有更广泛的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Progress in brain research
Progress in brain research 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
174
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Progress in Brain Research is the most acclaimed and accomplished series in neuroscience. The serial is well-established as an extensive documentation of contemporary advances in the field. The volumes contain authoritative reviews and original articles by invited specialists. The rigorous editing of the volumes assures that they will appeal to all laboratory and clinical brain research workers in the various disciplines: neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology, neuroendocrinology, neuropathology, basic neurology, biological psychiatry and the behavioral sciences.
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