Journal Home > Volume 6 , Issue 2

menu
Full text
Outline
About this article

Go Human! Circadian translational medicine has come of age

Show Author's information Dapeng Ju1Eric Erquan Zhang1,2( )
National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing 102206, China
Tsinghua Institute of Multidisciplinary Biomedical Research, Tsinghua University, Beijing 102206, China

References(7)

[1]
CR Cederroth, U Albrecht, J Bass, et al. Medicine in the fourth dimension. Cell Metab. 2019, 30(2): 238-250.
[2]
MD Ruben, DF Smith, GA FitzGerald, et al. Dosing time matters. Science. 2019, 365(6453): 547-549.
[3]
DP Ju, W Zhang, JW Yan, et al. Chemical perturbations reveal that RUVBL2 regulates the circadian phase in mammals. Sci Transl Med. 2020, 12(542): eaba0769.
[4]
Q Gao, J Sheng, S Qin, et al. Chronotypes and affective disorders: A clock for mood? Brain Sci Adv. 2019, 5(3): 145-160.
[5]
M Werdann, Y Zhang. Circadian rhythm and neurodegenerative disorders. Brain Sci Adv. 2020, 6(1): in press, .
[6]
ZW Liu, YY Dong, Y Xu, et al. Chronotype distribution in the Chinese population. Brain Sci Adv. 2020, 6(1): in press, .
[7]
G Wu, MD Ruben, YY Lee, et al. Genome-wide studies of time of day in the brain: Design and analysis. Brain Sci Adv. 2020, 6(1): in press, .
Publication history
Copyright
Rights and permissions

Publication history

Published: 31 August 2020
Issue date: June 2020

Copyright

© The authors 2020

Rights and permissions

This article is published with open access at journals.sagepub.com/home/BSA

Creative Commons Non Commercial CC BY- NC: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/ en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).

Return