The Effect of a Common Daily Schedule on Human Circadian Rhythms During the Polar Day in Svalbard: A Field Study

J Circadian Rhythms. 2019 Oct 9:17:9. doi: 10.5334/jcr.186.

Abstract

All Arctic visitors have to deal with extreme conditions, including a constant high light intensity during the summer season or constant darkness during winter. The light/dark cycle serves as the most potent synchronizing signal for the biological clock, and any Arctic visitor attending those regions during winter or summer would struggle with the absence of those entraining signals. However, the inner clock can be synchronized by other zeitgebers such as physical activity, food intake, or social interactions. Here, we investigated the effect of the polar day on the circadian clock of 10 researchers attending the polar base station in the Svalbard region during the summer season. The data collected in Svalbard was compared with data obtained just before leaving for the expedition (in the Czech Republic 49.8175°N, 15.4730°E). To determine the circadian functions, we monitored activity/rest rhythm with wrist actigraphy followed by sleep diaries, melatonin rhythm in saliva, and clock gene expression (Per1, Bmal1, and Nr1D1) in buccal mucosa samples. Our data shows that the two-week stay in Svalbard delayed melatonin onset but did not affect its rhythmic secretion, and delayed the activity/rest rhythm. Furthermore, the clock gene expression displayed a higher amplitude in Svalbard compared to the amplitude detected in the Czech Republic. We hypothesize that the common daily schedule at the Svalbard expedition strengthens circadian rhythmicity even in conditions of compromised light/dark cycles. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate peripheral clock gene expression during a polar expedition.

Keywords: arctic; circadian system; human chronobiology; polar day; social cues.

Grants and funding

The study was supported by the Charles University grant agency GA UK Nr. 952216, NPU I program Nr. LO1611 with financial support from the MEYS under the NPU I program, by SVV/2019 and by the European Regional Development Fund-Projects “PharmaBrain” No. CZ.CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_025/0007444 and by Progres Q35 of the 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague. We would also like to thank the Czech Arctic Research Infrastructure “Josef Svoboda Station”, and especially Dr. Oleg Ditrich and Dr. Josef Eltzner, who made this research possible (Project LM2015078 CzechPolar 2 founded by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic).