Circadian clock–coupled lung cellular and molecular functions in chronic airway diseases

IK Sundar, H Yao, MT Sellix… - American journal of …, 2015 - atsjournals.org
IK Sundar, H Yao, MT Sellix, I Rahman
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2015atsjournals.org
Airway diseases are associated with abnormal circadian rhythms of lung function, reflected
in daily changes of airway caliber, airway resistance, respiratory symptoms, and abnormal
immune-inflammatory responses. Circadian rhythms are generated at the cellular level by
an autoregulatory feedback loop of interlocked transcription factors collectively referred to as
clock genes. The molecular clock is altered by cigarette smoke, LPS, and bacterial and viral
infections in mouse and human lungs and in patients with chronic airway diseases. Stress …
Airway diseases are associated with abnormal circadian rhythms of lung function, reflected in daily changes of airway caliber, airway resistance, respiratory symptoms, and abnormal immune-inflammatory responses. Circadian rhythms are generated at the cellular level by an autoregulatory feedback loop of interlocked transcription factors collectively referred to as clock genes. The molecular clock is altered by cigarette smoke, LPS, and bacterial and viral infections in mouse and human lungs and in patients with chronic airway diseases. Stress-mediated post-translational modification of molecular clock proteins, brain and muscle aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like 1 (BMAL1) and PERIOD 2, is associated with a reduction in the activity/level of the deacetylase sirtuin 1 (SIRT1). Similarly, the levels of the nuclear receptor REV-ERBα and retinoic acid receptor–related orphan receptor α (ROR α), critical regulators of Bmal1 expression, are altered by environmental stresses. Molecular clock dysfunction is implicated in immune and inflammatory responses, DNA damage response, and cellular senescence. The molecular clock in the lung also regulates the timing of glucocorticoid sensitivity and phasic responsiveness to inflammation. Herein, we review our current understanding of clock-controlled cellular and molecular functions in the lungs, the impact of clock dysfunction in chronic airway disease, and the response of the pulmonary clock to different environmental perturbations. Furthermore, we discuss the evidence for candidate signaling pathways, such as the SIRT1–BMAL1–REV-ERBα axis, as novel targets for chronopharmacological management of chronic airway diseases.
ATS Journals