Communications Biology (Sep 2024)

Dim light at night unmasks sex-specific differences in circadian and autonomic regulation of cardiovascular physiology

  • Abhilash Prabhat,
  • Dema Sami,
  • Allison Ehlman,
  • Isabel Stumpf,
  • Tanya Seward,
  • Wen Su,
  • Ming C. Gong,
  • Elizabeth A. Schroder,
  • Brian P. Delisle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06861-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Shift work and artificial light at night disrupt the entrainment of endogenous circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior to the day-night cycle. We hypothesized that exposure to dim light at night (dLAN) disrupts feeding rhythms, leading to sex-specific changes in autonomic signaling and day-night heart rate and blood pressure rhythms. Compared to mice housed in 12-hour light/12-hour dark cycles, mice exposed to dLAN showed reduced amplitudes in day-night feeding, heart rate, and blood pressure rhythms. In female mice, dLAN reduced the amplitude of day-night cardiovascular rhythms by decreasing the relative sympathetic regulation at night, while in male mice, it did so by increasing the relative sympathetic regulation during the daytime. Time-restricted feeding to the dim light cycle reversed these autonomic changes in both sexes. We conclude that dLAN induces sex-specific changes in autonomic regulation of heart rate and blood pressure, and time-restricted feeding may represent a chronotherapeutic strategy to mitigate the cardiovascular impact of light at night.