4.2 Article

Shift Work Disrupts Circadian Regulation of the Transcriptome in Hospital Nurses

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS
Volume 34, Issue 2, Pages 167-177

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0748730419826694

Keywords

chronobiology; endocrinology; sleep; circadian disruption; microarray; clock genes

Funding

  1. UAB Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS) Grant [NIH UL1TR000165]
  2. Department of Vision Sciences
  3. UAB Comprehensive Diabetes Center
  4. UAB Department of Psychiatry Office of Clinical Research
  5. UAB Faculty Development Grant Program
  6. UAB General Endowment Fund Actigraphy Core
  7. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [5R01NS054794-08, 7R01NS054794-11]
  8. National Human Genome Research Institute [2R01HG005220-5, 1R21NS101983-01]

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Circadian misalignment between sleep and behavioral/feeding rhythms is thought to lead to various health impairments in shift workers. Therefore, we investigated how shift work leads to genome-wide circadian dysregulation in hospital nurses. Female nurses from the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Hospital working night shift (n = 9; 29.6 +/- 11.4 y) and day shift (n = 8; 34.9 +/- 9.4 y) participated in a 9-day study measuring locomotor activity and core body temperature (CBT) continuously. Additionally, cortisol and melatonin were assayed and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were harvested for RNA extraction every 3 h on a day off from work. We saw phase desynchrony of core body temperature, peak cortisol, and dim light melatonin onset in individual night-shift subjects compared with day-shift subjects. This variability was evident even though day- and night-shift nurses had similar sleep timing and scheduled meal times on days off. Surprisingly, the phase and rhythmicity of the expression of the clock gene, PER1, in PBMCs were similar for day-shift and night-shift subjects. Genome-wide microarray analysis of PBMCs from a subset of nurses revealed distinct gene expression patterns between night-shift and day-shift subjects. Enrichment analysis showed that day-shift subjects expressed pathways involved in generic transcription and regulation of signal transduction, whereas night-shift subjects expressed pathways such as RNA polymerase I promoter opening, the matrisome, and endocytosis. In addition, there was large variability in the number of rhythmic transcripts among subjects, regardless of shift type. Interestingly, the amplitude of the CBT rhythm appeared to be more consistent with the number of cycling transcripts for each of the 6 subjects than was melatonin rhythm. In summary, we show that shift-work patterns affect circadian alignment and gene expression in PBMCs.

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