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Circadian-Glymphatic-Metabolic Coupling Failure Hypothesis in AD

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hypothesis1758 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Circadian-Glymphatic-Metabolic Coupling Failure Hypothesis in AD

Overview

This hypothesis proposes that disruption of circadian clock function is a primary upstream driver of Alzheimer's disease through the failure of three tightly coupled systems: (1) glymphatic clearance of [amyloid-beta](/proteins/amyloid-beta) and [tau](/proteins/tau), (2) neuronal metabolic coupling, and (3) orexin/neuropeptide Y signaling. Unlike previous hypotheses that treat sleep disruption as a downstream consequence of neurodegeneration, this framework positions circadian dysfunction as an independent upstream contributor that accelerates protein aggregation and neuronal loss.

Mechanistic Framework

Layer 1: Circadian Clock Dysfunction

The molecular clock (BMAL1/CLOCK/PER/CRY) governs ~24-hour rhythms in:

  • Astrocyte AQP4 polarization (perivascular end-foot localization)
  • Microglial surveillance state (pro-inflammatory vs. homeostatic)
  • Neuronal metabolic capacity (mitochondrial dynamics, glycolysis)
  • Neurovascular coupling (cerebral blood flow oscillations)

In aging and AD, clock gene expression becomes dysregulated in the SCN and in peripheral cells. This reduces the amplitude of circadian rhythms, leading to:
  • Loss of the sleep-wake Aβ/tau oscillation amplitude
  • Reduced SWS-dependent glymphatic clearance
  • Microglial priming toward pro-inflammatory state
  • Metabolic inflexibility in neurons

Layer 2: Glymphatic Clearance Failure


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