Scientific Reports (Jul 2017)

Diurnal preference, mood and the response to morning light in relation to polymorphisms in the human clock gene PER3

  • M. Turco,
  • A. Biscontin,
  • M. Corrias,
  • L. Caccin,
  • M. Bano,
  • F. Chiaromanni,
  • M. Salamanca,
  • D. Mattei,
  • C. Salvoro,
  • G. Mazzotta,
  • C. De Pittà,
  • B. Middleton,
  • D. J. Skene,
  • S. Montagnese,
  • R. Costa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06769-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract PER3 gene polymorphisms have been associated with differences in human sleep-wake phenotypes, and sensitivity to light. The aims of this study were to assess: i) the frequency of allelic variants at two PER3 polymorphic sites (rs57875989 length polymorphism: PER3 4, PER3 5; rs228697 SNP: PER3 C, PER3 G) in relation to sleep-wake timing; ii) the effect of morning light on behavioural/circadian variables in PER3 4 /PER3 4 and PER3 5 /PER3 5 homozygotes. 786 Caucasian subjects living in Northern Italy donated buccal DNA and completed diurnal preference, sleep quality/timing and sleepiness/mood questionnaires. 19 PER3 4 /PER3 4 and 11 PER3 5 /PER3 5 homozygotes underwent morning light administration, whilst monitoring sleep-wake patterns and the urinary 6-sulphatoxymelatonin (aMT6s) rhythm. No significant relationship was observed between the length polymorphism and diurnal preference. By contrast, a significant association was observed between the PER3 G variant and morningness (OR = 2.10), and between the PER3 G-PER3 4 haplotype and morningness (OR = 2.19), for which a mechanistic hypothesis is suggested. No significant differences were observed in sleep timing/aMT6s rhythms between PER3 5 /PER3 5 and PER3 4 /PER3 4 subjects at baseline. After light administration, PER3 4 /PER3 4 subjects advanced their aMT6s acrophase (p < 0.05), and showed a trend of advanced sleep-wake timing. In conclusion, significant associations were observed between PER3 polymorphic variants/their combinations and both diurnal preference and the response to light.