Researchers at the Universities of Edinburgh and Manchester have taken a significant step towards creating novel treatments for Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).
Researchers at the Universities of Edinburgh and Manchester have taken a significant step towards creating novel treatments for Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). The researchers have discovered two 'body clock' genes that reveal how seasonal changes in hormones are controlled. Eventually, it is hoped that the findings could help lead to new ways to tackle SAD - a form of depression suffered during the winter months.
The researchers have been investigating how genes affect changes in the body caused by the seasons. They found that one of these genes (EYA3) has a similar role in both birds and mammals, showing a common link that has been conserved for more than 300 million years.
Scientists studied thousands of genes in Soay sheep. This breed, which dates back to the Bronze Age, is considered to be one of the most primitive with seasonal body clocks unaffected by cross breeding throughout the centuries.
For a long time, scientists had speculated that a key molecule - termed tuberalin - was produced in the pituitary gland at the base of the brain and sent signals to release hormones involved in driving seasonal changes.
However, until now scientists have had no idea about the nature of this molecule, how it works or how it is controlled.
The team focussed on a part of the brain that responds to melatonin - a hormone known to be involved in seasonal timing in mammals.
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The researchers subsequently identified two genes - TAC1 and EYA3 - that were both activated early when natural hormone levels rise due to longer days.
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The study suggests that the first gene TAC1 could only work when the second gene EYA3 - which is also found in birds - was present. The second gene may act to regulate TAC 1 so that it could be switched on in response to increasing day length.
Professor Andrew Loudon, of the University of Manchester's Faculty of Life Sciences, said: "A lot of our behaviour is controlled by seasons. This research sheds new light on how animals adapt to seasonal change, which impacts on factors including hibernation, fat deposition and reproduction as well as the ability to fight off diseases."
The findings have been published in the journal Current Biology.
Source-ANI
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