Authors
Jun Z Li, Blynn G Bunney, Fan Meng, Megan H Hagenauer, David M Walsh, Marquis P Vawter, Simon J Evans, Prabhakara V Choudary, Preston Cartagena, Jack D Barchas, Alan F Schatzberg, Edward G Jones, Richard M Myers, Stanley J Watson Jr, Huda Akil, William E Bunney
Publication date
2013/6/11
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
110
Issue
24
Pages
9950-9955
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
A cardinal symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD) is the disruption of circadian patterns. However, to date, there is no direct evidence of circadian clock dysregulation in the brains of patients who have MDD. Circadian rhythmicity of gene expression has been observed in animals and peripheral human tissues, but its presence and variability in the human brain were difficult to characterize. Here, we applied time-of-death analysis to gene expression data from high-quality postmortem brains, examining 24-h cyclic patterns in six cortical and limbic regions of 55 subjects with no history of psychiatric or neurological illnesses (“controls”) and 34 patients with MDD. Our dataset covered ∼12,000 transcripts in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and cerebellum. Several hundred transcripts in each region showed 24-h cyclic patterns in controls …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JZ Li, BG Bunney, F Meng, MH Hagenauer, DM Walsh… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013