Scientific Reports (Jul 2021)

Genomic heterogeneity affects the response to Daylight Saving Time

  • Jonathan Tyler,
  • Yu Fang,
  • Cathy Goldstein,
  • Daniel Forger,
  • Srijan Sen,
  • Margit Burmeister

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94459-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Circadian clocks control the timing of many physiological events in the 24-h day. When individuals undergo an abrupt external shift (e.g., change in work schedule or travel across multiple time zones), circadian clocks become misaligned with the new time and may take several days to adjust. Chronic circadian misalignment, e.g., as a result of shift work, has been shown to lead to several physical and mental health problems. Despite the serious health implications of circadian misalignment, relatively little is known about how genetic variation affects an individual’s ability to entrain to abrupt external changes. Accordingly, we used the one-hour advance from the onset of daylight saving time (DST) as a natural experiment to comprehensively study how individual heterogeneity affects the shift of sleep/wake cycles in response to an abrupt external time change. We found that individuals genetically predisposed to a morning tendency adjusted to the advance in a few days, while genetically predisposed evening-inclined individuals had not shifted. Observing differential effects by genetic disposition after a one-hour advance underscores the importance of heterogeneity in adaptation to external schedule shifts. These genetic differences may affect how individuals adjust to jet lag or shift work as well.