Scientists have identified a promising new oral compound that could revolutionize how travelers and shift workers manage their sleep schedules. A research team involving experts from Osaka University and Kanazawa University has discovered a molecule named Mic-628 that effectively resets the body’s internal clock forward. In tests using mouse models, this “smart drug” significantly reduced the time required to adjust to a new time zone, offering hope for a reliable treatment for jet lag and circadian rhythm disorders.
The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), demonstrates that a single dose of Mic-628 can synchronize the body’s biological rhythms. Unlike current treatments that require precise timing to be effective, this new compound appears to work consistently regardless of when it is taken. This breakthrough addresses a long-standing challenge in sleep medicine: the difficulty of advancing the body clock to match earlier schedules, such as when flying east or starting a morning shift.
The Challenge of Resetting the Body Clock
The human body operates on a circadian rhythm, a natural internal process that regulates the sleep-wake cycle and repeats roughly every 24 hours. This system is controlled by a “master clock” in the brain’s suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and peripheral clocks found in organs throughout the body, such as the lungs. When this rhythm is disrupted—most commonly by rapid travel across time zones—the result is jet lag.
Adjusting to a new time zone is not equally difficult in all directions. Delaying the body clock, which happens when traveling west, is generally easier for the body to manage. However, advancing the clock to accommodate eastward travel or early shifts is much more physically stressful and slow. Current methods to force this adjustment, such as strategic light exposure or taking melatonin supplements, are heavily dependent on timing. If used at the wrong moment, these treatments can fail to shift the clock or even make the jet lag worse.
The discovery of Mic-628 offers a potential solution to this specific problem. The compound was found to induce a stable, one-direction shift forward in the circadian rhythm, directly countering the biological lag that occurs during eastward travel.
How Mic-628 Hacks the Biological Clock
The research team, which included scientists from the Institute of Science Tokyo and Toyohashi University of Technology, identified the specific biological mechanism that allows Mic-628 to work. The compound targets and activates a gene called Period1 (Per1), which is a core component of the mammalian clock system.
Mic-628 achieves this by binding to a protein known as CRY1. Under normal circumstances, CRY1 acts as a repressor, suppressing the activity of clock genes. When Mic-628 attaches to CRY1, it encourages the formation of a larger molecular structure called the CLOCK-BMAL1-CRY1-Mic-628 complex. This newly formed complex interacts with a specific DNA site known as a “dual E-box,” effectively flipping a switch that activates the Per1 gene.
By triggering this gene, the compound synchronizes the timing of both the master clock in the brain and the peripheral clocks in other tissues. This simultaneous reset is crucial for a complete recovery from jet lag, as it ensures that the body’s various systems are working in harmony rather than operating on different schedules.
Faster Recovery in Animal Trials
To validate the effectiveness of Mic-628, the researchers conducted experiments using a mouse model designed to simulate jet lag. The team created a “6-hour light-dark phase advance,” effectively mimicking the time shift a traveler would experience when flying six hours east.
In the control group, mice typically took about seven days to fully adjust their sleep-wake cycles to the new schedule. However, mice that received a single oral dose of Mic-628 recovered much faster. The treated mice adjusted to the time shift in just four days, cutting the recovery time nearly in half.
Detailed mathematical analysis of the results revealed that the compound drives this adjustment through a built-in feedback loop involving the PER1 protein. This loop helps stabilize the shift, preventing the body clock from drifting back to its original time.
A “Smart Drug” for Circadian Health
One of the most significant findings of the study is the reliability of Mic-628. The phase-advancing effect was observed regardless of when the drug was administered. This distinguishes it from existing therapies, which often yield inconsistent results if the patient miscalculates the timing of light exposure or melatonin intake.
The researchers view Mic-628 as a prototype for a new class of pharmaceuticals designed to treat circadian misalignment. Beyond jet lag, such a drug could have profound applications for individuals suffering from shift work sleep disorder or other conditions caused by irregular internal clocks.
Following these successful animal trials, the scientific team plans to continue investigating the safety and efficacy of Mic-628. Future steps will involve further animal studies and eventually human clinical trials to determine if this oral compound can become a standard treatment for resetting the human body clock.
