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Body clock 'alters' immune system

By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News

The time of the day could be an important factor in the risk of getting an

infection, according to researchers in the US.

They showed how a protein in the immune system was affected by changes in the

chemistry of the body through the day.

The findings, published in the journal Immunity, showed the time of an

infection changed its severity.

An expert said drugs were likely to take advantage of the body clock in the

near future.

Plants, animals and even bacteria go through a daily 24-hour routine, known as

a circadian rhythm. Jet lag is what happens when the body gets out of sync with

its surroundings after crossing time zones.

It has been known that there are variations in the immune system throughout the

day. Researchers are now drilling down into the details.

The immune system needs to detect an infection before it can begin to fight it

off. Researchers at Yale University School of Medicine were investigating one

of the proteins involved in the detection process - Toll-like receptor nine

(TLR9), which can spot DNA from bacteria and viruses.

In experiments on mice, the scientists showed that the amount of TLR9 produced

and the way it functioned was controlled by the body clock and varied through

the day.

Immunising mice at the peak of TLR9 activity improved the immune response, the

researchers said.

They said humans with sepsis, blood poisoning, were known to be at a greater

risk of death between 02:00 and 06:00.

Time link

When testing mice, the severity of sepsis depended on the time of day infection

started and coincided with changes in TLR9 activity.

Prof Erol Fikrig, who conducted the study at Yale University, said they had

found a "direct molecular link between circadian rhythms and the immune

system", which could have "important implications for the prevention and

treatment of disease".

He added: "It does appear that disruptions of the circadian clock influence our

susceptibility to pathogens."

Dr Akhilesh Reddy, who is researching circadian rhythms at the University of

Cambridge, said it was "known long ago" that timing had an impact on the immune

system, but this was "one of the first forays" into the reasons why.

The implications for healthcare could mean that drugs need to be given at

certain times of day in order to make them more effective, or drugs could be

made which actually target the body clock to put the immune system into its

most active phase.

Dr Reddy said drug companies were "all switching onto this" and were "now

screening drugs at different times of the day".

He could see the body clock impacting medicine "within 10 years".