For Whom the Clock Ticks: Clinical Chronobiology for Infectious Diseases

Archive ouverte

Diallo, Aissatou Bailo | Coiffard, Benjamin | Leone, Marc | Mezouar, Soraya | Mege, Jean-Louis

Edité par CCSD ; Frontiers -

International audience. The host defense against pathogens varies among individuals. Among the factors influencing host response, those associated with circadian disruptions are emerging. These latter depend on molecular clocks, which control the two partners of host defense: microbes and immune system. There is some evidence that infections are closely related to circadian rhythms in terms of susceptibility, clinical presentation and severity. In this review, we overview what is known about circadian rhythms in infectious diseases and update the knowledge about circadian rhythms in immune system, pathogens and vectors. This heuristic approach opens a new fascinating field of time-based personalized treatment of infected patients.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

A Tangled Threesome: Circadian Rhythm, Body Temperature Variations, and the Immune System

Archive ouverte | Coiffard, Benjamin | CCSD

International audience. The circadian rhythm of the body temperature (CRBT) is a marker of the central biological clock that results from multiple complex biological processes. In mammals, including humans, the body...

Daytime variation in SARS-CoV-2 infection and cytokine production

Archive ouverte | Diallo, Aïssatou Bailo | CCSD

International audience

RadA, a Key Gene of the Circadian Rhythm of Escherichia coli

Archive ouverte | Diallo, Aissatou Bailo | CCSD

International audience. Circadian rhythms are present in almost all living organisms, and their activity relies on molecular clocks. In prokaryotes, a functional molecular clock has been defined only in cyanobacteri...

Chargement des enrichissements...