Katsutaka Oishi (senior research scientist) and Norio Ishida (group leader) of Clock Cell Biology Research Group, the Institute for Biological Resources and Functions (Director: Masahiro Iwakura), the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (President: Hiroyuki Yoshikawa) (hereinafter referred to as AIST), along with Hidenori Shirai (The University of Tsukuba) and Shigenobu Shibata (Waseda University), discovered that it is possible to regulate the circadian clock by fibrate which is a drug used in the treatment of hyperlipemia.
When we bred nocturnal rodents under the daily light-dark cycle, their behavioral activity is usually restricted to the nighttime (dark period). Circadian locomotor activity was phase-advanced about 3 hours in mice given fibrate under light-dark condition. They began activity at the latter half of the daytime (light period).
Fibrate also advanced and normalized the active phase that is delayed in model mice with Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome (DSPS) due to a circadian clock gene mutation. As fibrates are specific ligands of nuclear receptor PPARα, PPARα could be a potent target of drugs to treat circadian rhythm sleep disorders including DSPS.



