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Body clock 'reset button' found | Body clock 'reset button' found |
(about 16 hours later) | |
Drugs that rapidly tweak the body clock in order to avoid jet lag and the pains of shift work have moved a step closer after research in Japan. | Drugs that rapidly tweak the body clock in order to avoid jet lag and the pains of shift work have moved a step closer after research in Japan. |
The team at Kyoto University has found the clock's 'reset button' inside the brain. | |
Their study, published in the journal Science, showed the button could be used to switch the clock to a new time zone in a single day. | Their study, published in the journal Science, showed the button could be used to switch the clock to a new time zone in a single day. |
Experts said the team was "close to the money" in the hunt for a jet lag cure. | Experts said the team was "close to the money" in the hunt for a jet lag cure. |
There are clocks throughout the body and a "master clock" in the brain, keeping the body in sync with the world around it to make people sleepy at night. | There are clocks throughout the body and a "master clock" in the brain, keeping the body in sync with the world around it to make people sleepy at night. |
Anyone who has ever done shift work or a long-haul flight has experienced the disrupted sleep and hunger patterns of a body clock which is out of tune with the rising and setting of the sun. | Anyone who has ever done shift work or a long-haul flight has experienced the disrupted sleep and hunger patterns of a body clock which is out of tune with the rising and setting of the sun. |
The clock uses light to help keep track of time, but it is naturally stubborn and adjusts slowly. | The clock uses light to help keep track of time, but it is naturally stubborn and adjusts slowly. |
The rough rule is that for every time zone crossed it takes a full day for the body to catch up. Fly from London to Beijing and it would take a week for the body clock to fully adapt. | The rough rule is that for every time zone crossed it takes a full day for the body to catch up. Fly from London to Beijing and it would take a week for the body clock to fully adapt. |
Loosen up | Loosen up |
The team in Japan have come up with a way to get the master clock to be a bit more flexible. | The team in Japan have come up with a way to get the master clock to be a bit more flexible. |
It is a group of 10,000 brain cells - about the same size as a grain of rice - which constantly talk to each other to keep a strict control over the time. | It is a group of 10,000 brain cells - about the same size as a grain of rice - which constantly talk to each other to keep a strict control over the time. |
The scientists found that interfering with the vasopressin receptors, essentially a brain cell's ears that allow it to keep in touch with its neighbours, let the clock shift rapidly. | The scientists found that interfering with the vasopressin receptors, essentially a brain cell's ears that allow it to keep in touch with its neighbours, let the clock shift rapidly. |
Genetically modified mice which had no vasopressin receptors were able to adjust to the clocks being put back eight hours within a single day, while normal mice took six days. | Genetically modified mice which had no vasopressin receptors were able to adjust to the clocks being put back eight hours within a single day, while normal mice took six days. |
When the clocks were put forward eight hours then it took normal mice eight days to adapt, but those without vasopressin receptors adjusted in two. | When the clocks were put forward eight hours then it took normal mice eight days to adapt, but those without vasopressin receptors adjusted in two. |
Similar results were then achieved in normal mice using a drug. | Similar results were then achieved in normal mice using a drug. |
'Remarkable' | 'Remarkable' |
The study's authors concluded: "Studies have shown that chronic jet lag and rotating shift work can increase an individual's risk of developing hypertension, obesity, and other metabolic disorders. | The study's authors concluded: "Studies have shown that chronic jet lag and rotating shift work can increase an individual's risk of developing hypertension, obesity, and other metabolic disorders. |
"Our results identify vasopressin signalling as a possible therapeutic target for the management of circadian rhythm [body clock] misalignment." | "Our results identify vasopressin signalling as a possible therapeutic target for the management of circadian rhythm [body clock] misalignment." |
Dr Michael Hastings, a Medical Research Council body clock researcher, told the BBC's Science in Action programme: "It's a remarkable study, it really is very exciting for our field. | Dr Michael Hastings, a Medical Research Council body clock researcher, told the BBC's Science in Action programme: "It's a remarkable study, it really is very exciting for our field. |
"There's been many false dawns when it comes to a cure for jet lag, but I think this time they're close to the money." | "There's been many false dawns when it comes to a cure for jet lag, but I think this time they're close to the money." |
However, he cautioned that vasopressin receptors were also heavily involved in kidney function so any drug developed would need to be designed carefully to target the body clock without disrupting the kidneys. | However, he cautioned that vasopressin receptors were also heavily involved in kidney function so any drug developed would need to be designed carefully to target the body clock without disrupting the kidneys. |
Dr Hastings added that with an increasingly 24-7 society a drug which can adjust the body clock could, in theory, improve the health of shift workers. | Dr Hastings added that with an increasingly 24-7 society a drug which can adjust the body clock could, in theory, improve the health of shift workers. |
"The issue here in terms of public health is rotational shift work, the epidemiological evidence that we have now shows that if a worker has spent a working life doing rotational shift work they're at higher risk of contracting certain forms of cancer, cardiovascular disease or metabolic syndrome like diabetes." | "The issue here in terms of public health is rotational shift work, the epidemiological evidence that we have now shows that if a worker has spent a working life doing rotational shift work they're at higher risk of contracting certain forms of cancer, cardiovascular disease or metabolic syndrome like diabetes." |