Publication | Open Access
Mania-like behavior induced by disruption of <i>CLOCK</i>
799
Citations
30
References
2007
Year
GeneticsMolecular ClockPsychologySocial SciencesPsychophysiologyCircadian RhythmNeurogeneticsAlertnessPsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceMania-like BehaviorClock GeneNeuropharmacologyCircadian RhythmsPsychiatric DisorderDopamineMelatoninMood SpectrumMood DisordersBiological PsychiatryNeuroscienceMedicineChronobiologyPsychopathology
Circadian rhythms and the CLOCK gene have been linked to bipolar disorder, yet the precise role of CLOCK in the disorder remains unclear. Clock mutant mice exhibit mania-like behaviors that are reversed by lithium, linked to heightened ventral tegmental dopaminergic activity, and are rescued by restoring CLOCK expression, establishing a novel mania model and highlighting CLOCK’s role in mood regulation.
Circadian rhythms and the genes that make up the molecular clock have long been implicated in bipolar disorder. Genetic evidence in bipolar patients suggests that the central transcriptional activator of molecular rhythms, CLOCK, may be particularly important. However, the exact role of this gene in the development of this disorder remains unclear. Here we show that mice carrying a mutation in the Clock gene display an overall behavioral profile that is strikingly similar to human mania, including hyperactivity, decreased sleep, lowered depression-like behavior, lower anxiety, and an increase in the reward value for cocaine, sucrose, and medial forebrain bundle stimulation. Chronic administration of the mood stabilizer lithium returns many of these behavioral responses to wild-type levels. In addition, the Clock mutant mice have an increase in dopaminergic activity in the ventral tegmental area, and their behavioral abnormalities are rescued by expressing a functional CLOCK protein via viral-mediated gene transfer specifically in the ventral tegmental area. These findings establish the Clock mutant mice as a previously unrecognized model of human mania and reveal an important role for CLOCK in the dopaminergic system in regulating behavior and mood.
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