Skip to main content
The University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Search UMass.edu
College of Natural Sciences

Main navigation

  • Academics
    Undergraduate programsGraduate programsCertificate programsFlexible and online learningAll academic programsCourses
    See all departments
    Degree requirementsInfo for prospective studentsPre-college programs
  • Student Success
    CNS Student Success CenterAcademic AdvisingCareer and Professional DevelopmentGraduate Student SuccessPre-Med/Pre-Health AdvisingStudent Success and DiversityYour Academic Deans
    First Year OpportunitiesAdvising FAQsScholarshipsStudent Organizations
  • Research
    Research centers & institutesUndergraduate researchGreenhousesIndustry partnershipsResearch supportCNS Bridge and Seed Funding (BSF) programScientific glassblowing laboratory
  • Campus & Outreach
    Diversity, Equity & InclusionStudent Success and DiversityEureka!Community ConnectionsGivingCenter for Agriculture, Food, and the EnvironmentUMass Extension
  • About
    NewsStoriesEventsPeopleMeet the leadershipBuildings and facilitiesContact
    Information for faculty & staffInformation for alumni

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. News

Research from Doctoral Student Gregory Pearson Suggests Daily Cycle in Immune System

April 1, 2026 Research

Content

A rather sniffly individual at a desk
Image
Gregory Pearson
Gregory Pearson, a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences

New research led by Gregory Pearson, a doctoral student in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences in the College of Natural Sciences, reveals that the brain’s immune defenses operate on a daily schedule, a finding with potential implications for how we think about respiratory infections and their neurological consequences.

The study, co-authored with Pearson’s colleagues in the Karatsoreos Lab, led by Ilia Karatsoreos, professor of psychological and brain science, and published in Cell Reports, shows that the mouse olfactory bulb, a brain region directly connected to the nasal cavity and a known entry point for viruses like influenza and herpes simplex, rhythmically ramps up antiviral gene expression around dusk, and mounts markedly different immune responses to a nasal viral mimic depending on time of day.

The team also found distinct subpopulations of microglia, the brain’s resident immune cells, whose responses varied with the timing of the challenge. 

Image
A diagram illustrating neuroinflammation-related transcripts
Neuroinflammation-related transcripts are rhythmically expressed in the olfactory bulb.

The findings suggest that when a person is exposed to a respiratory pathogen may matter as much as the pathogen itself and could help explain why shift workers and others with disrupted circadian rhythms face elevated risks of infection and inflammatory disease.

The paper, “Time of day alters olfactory bulb immune state with ramifications for intranasal inflammatory challenge,” is online now from Cell Reports.


This story was originally published by the UMass News Office.

Article posted in Research for Public

Related programs

  • Psychology

Related departments

  • Psychological and Brain Sciences

Site footer

College of Natural Sciences
  • Find us on X
  • Find us on Facebook
  • Find us on YouTube
  • Find us on LinkedIn
  • Find us on Instagram
Address

101 Stockbridge Hall
80 Campus Center Way
Amherst, MA 01003-9248
United States

Phone number
(413) 545-2766

Info for...

  • Current students
  • Faculty and staff
  • Alumni

Academics

  • Explore our programs
  • Departments

The college

  • About CNS
  • News
  • Events

Contact

  • Contact CNS
  • Directory
University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • ©2026 University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Site policies
  • Privacy
  • Non-discrimination notice
  • Accessibility
  • Terms of use