Bipolar Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Bipolar, including details on bipolar disorder, symptoms, treatment, depression, medication. | ||||||||
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Assessment of circadian function in fibroblasts of patients with bipolar disorder.Yang S, Van Dongen HP, Wang K, Berrettini W, Bućan M Department of Genetics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6141, USA. Previous studies have implicated the circadian system in the pathophysiology of bipolar disorder, but conclusive evidence for altered circadian clocks is lacking. Cultured fibroblasts harbor circadian clocks representative of those in the master clock resident in the suprachiasmatic nuclei, providing a new avenue to investigate the core clock machinery in patients with bipolar illness. We examined the rhythmic expression patterns of core clock genes (BMAL1, PER1, PER2, REV-ERBalpha, DEC2, DBP) in fibroblasts from 12 bipolar patients and 12 healthy controls. Although we did not detect differences in the circadian period between bipolar patients and controls, the amplitude of rhythmic expression for BMAL1, REV-ERBalpha and DBP, as well as the overall mRNA expression level for DEC2 and DBP was reduced in fibroblasts from bipolar patients. Bonferroni's correction for multiple comparisons still resulted in significantly reduced DBP expression level, and trends toward reduced overall expression level of DEC2 and circadian amplitude of BMAL1, in fibroblasts from bipolar patients. We next examined an expanded cohort of 18 bipolar patients and 35 healthy controls for mRNA expression levels of four kinases (CKIdelta, CKIepsilon, GSK3alpha and GSK3beta) and the protein and phosphorylation levels of two of them (GSK3alpha and GSK3beta). We did not detect differences in steady-state mRNA levels or protein levels of these kinases between bipolar patients and controls, but the level of GSK3beta phosphorylation was significantly reduced in bipolar patients within an Old Order Amish bipolar kindred. Our results suggest that the reduced amplitudes and overall expression levels of circadian genes, and the decreased phosphorylation level of GSK3beta may lead to dysregulation of downstream genes, which could explain some pathological features of bipolar disorder. Published 21 January 2009 in Mol Psychiatry, 14(2): 143-55.
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