Nexus of Sleep, Circadian Rhythm, Metabolism, and Mental Health

About this Research Topic

Submission deadlines

  1. Manuscript Summary Submission Deadline 23 March 2026 | Manuscript Submission Deadline 13 July 2026

  2. This Research Topic is currently accepting articles.

Background

Sleep and circadian rhythms are fundamental biological processes that bidirectionally regulate metabolic homeostasis, cognitive performance, emotional regulation, and overall mental health. Disruptions in these systems have been increasingly recognized as pathogenic drivers in metabolic disorders, neurocognitive dysfunction, immune dysregulation, and psychiatric conditions such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Recent advances in neuroimaging, digital health phenotyping, multi-omics profiling, and computational neuroscience have enabled more precise delineation of the bidirectional links between sleep physiology, energy balance, and neurobehavioral outcomes. Simultaneously, establishing animal models of human disease, large-scale epidemiological cohorts, and clinical trials has provided translational and critical insight into how environmental, nutritional, and pharmacological factors interact with sleep to shape health trajectories. This rapidly evolving field highlights the need for an integrated framework that unites molecular, behavioral, and clinical perspectives to better understand the nexus of sleep, biological clock, metabolism, and mental health.

The primary objective of this Research Topic is to address the pressing need for a mechanistic, translational, and population-level understanding of how sleep and circadian disruption contribute to metabolic and psychiatric pathophysiology. Despite substantial progress, significant gaps remain in linking cellular- and neural circuitry-level processes—such as metabolic signaling, neuroimmune pathways, and synaptic plasticity—to clinical manifestations including mood disorders, cognitive impairment, and cardiometabolic disease. Recent advances, including real-time digital health monitoring, machine-learning-based behavioral phenotyping, and precision nutrition approaches, present new opportunities to quantify and model dynamic interactions between sleep–wake regulation and systemic brain–body physiology. Additionally, innovations in chrono-therapeutics, anesthesiology research, and circadian-informed pharmacology offer novel avenues for intervention. This Research Topic seeks to consolidate multidisciplinary discoveries, promote harmonization of measurement strategies, and catalyze translational pipelines from basic neurobiology to diagnostic innovation and evidence-based therapeutics. By integrating clinical trials, computational modeling, and epidemiological findings, we aim to facilitate a holistic understanding that ultimately informs prevention and personalized treatment strategies.

This Research Topic welcomes contributions that explore the relationships among sleep, circadian rhythms, metabolism, and mental health from molecular, behavioral, clinical, and computational perspectives.

Specific themes include:

- neurobiological mechanisms linking sleep to metabolic and psychiatric disorders

- circadian regulation of nutrition, immunity, and pharmacological responses

- digital health tools for sleep and behavioral assessment

anesthesia-related insights into consciousness and metabolic regulation

- learning and memory processes influenced by sleep architecture

- epidemiological or diagnostic approaches to sleep-related health outcomes.

To fully facilitate this exploration, this Research Topic is open to studies, reviews, and insights based on the findings in various model systems, including C. elegans, Drosophila, mice, and humans.

We welcome a variety of article types, including Original Research, Brief Research Report, Clinical Trial, Data Report, Hypothesis and Theory, Methods, Review, Mini Review, Opinion, Perspective, Technology, and Code. Interdisciplinary and translational work that bridges basic neuroscience with clinical or public-health relevance is especially encouraged.

Research Topic Research topic image

Article types and fees

This Research Topic accepts the following article types, unless otherwise specified in the Research Topic description:

  • Brief Research Report
  • Case Report
  • Clinical Trial
  • Community Case Study
  • Curriculum, Instruction, and Pedagogy
  • Data Report
  • Editorial
  • FAIR² Data
  • General Commentary

Articles that are accepted for publication by our external editors following rigorous peer review incur a publishing fee charged to Authors, institutions, or funders.

Keywords: Metabolism, Mental Health, Psychiatry, Learning and Memory, Aging, Anesthesiology, Clinical Trials, Epidemiology, Digital Health, Nutrition, Immunity, Pharmacology

Important note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.

Topic editors

Frequently asked questions

  • Frontiers' Research Topics are collaborative hubs built around an emerging theme.Defined, managed, and led by renowned researchers, they bring communities together around a shared area of interest to stimulate collaboration and innovation.

    Unlike section journals, which serve established specialty communities, Research Topics are pioneer hubs, responding to the evolving scientific landscape and catering to new communities.

  • The goal of Frontiers' publishing program is to empower research communities to actively steer the course of scientific publishing. Our program was implemented as a three-part unit with fixed field journals, flexible specialty sections, and dynamically emerging Research Topics, connecting communities of different sizes and maturity.

    Research Topics originate from the scientific community. Many of our Research Topics are suggested by existing editorial board members who have identified critical challenges or areas of interest in their field.

  • As an editor, Research Topics will help you build your journal, as well as your community, around emerging, cutting-edge research. As research trailblazers, Research Topics attract high-quality submissions from leading experts all over the world.

    A thriving Research Topic can potentially evolve into a new specialty section if there is sustained interest and a growing community around it.

  • Each Research Topic must be approved by the specialty chief editor, and it falls under the editorial oversight of our editorial boards, supported by our in-house research integrity team. The same standards and rigorous peer review processes apply to articles published as part of a Research Topic as for any other article we publish.

    In 2023, 80% of the Research Topics we published were edited or co-edited by our editorial board members, who are already familiar with their journal's scope, ethos, and publishing model. All other topics are guest edited by leaders in their field, each vetted and formally approved by the specialty chief editor.

  • Publishing your article within a Research Topic with other related articles increases its discoverability and visibility, which can lead to more views, downloads, and citations. Research Topics grow dynamically as more published articles are added, causing frequent revisiting, and further visibility.

    As Research Topics are multidisciplinary, they are cross-listed in several fields and section journals – increasing your reach even more and giving you the chance to expand your network and collaborate with researchers in different fields, all focusing on expanding knowledge around the same important topic.

    Our larger Research Topics are also converted into ebooks and receive social media promotion from our digital marketing team.

  • Frontiers offers multiple article types, but it will depend on the field and section journals in which the Research Topic will be featured. The available article types for a Research Topic will appear in the drop-down menu during the submission process.

    Check available article types here 

  • Yes, we would love to hear your ideas for a topic. Most of our Research Topics are community-led and suggested by researchers in the field. Our in-house editorial team will contact you to talk about your idea and whether you’d like to edit the topic. If you’re an early-stage researcher, we will offer you the opportunity to coordinate your topic, with the support of a senior researcher as the topic editor. 

    Suggest your topic here 

  • A team of guest editors (called topic editors) lead their Research Topic. This editorial team oversees the entire process, from the initial topic proposal to calls for participation, the peer review, and final publications.

    The team may also include topic coordinators, who help the topic editors send calls for participation, liaise with topic editors on abstracts, and support contributing authors. In some cases, they can also be assigned as reviewers.

  • As a topic editor (TE), you will take the lead on all editorial decisions for the Research Topic, starting with defining its scope. This allows you to curate research around a topic that interests you, bring together different perspectives from leading researchers across different fields and shape the future of your field. 

    You will choose your team of co-editors, curate a list of potential authors, send calls for participation and oversee the peer review process, accepting or recommending rejection for each manuscript submitted.

  • As a topic editor, you're supported at every stage by our in-house team. You will be assigned a single point of contact to help you on both editorial and technical matters. Your topic is managed through our user-friendly online platform, and the peer review process is supported by our industry-first AI review assistant (AIRA).

  • If you’re an early-stage researcher, we will offer you the opportunity to coordinate your topic, with the support of a senior researcher as the topic editor. This provides you with valuable editorial experience, improving your ability to critically evaluate research articles and enhancing your understanding of the quality standards and requirements for scientific publishing, as well as the opportunity to discover new research in your field, and expand your professional network.

  • Yes, certificates can be issued on request. We are happy to provide a certificate for your contribution to editing a successful Research Topic.

  • Research Topics thrive on collaboration and their multi-disciplinary approach around emerging, cutting-edge themes, attract leading researchers from all over the world.

  • As a topic editor, you can set the timeline for your Research Topic, and we will work with you at your pace. Typically, Research Topics are online and open for submissions within a few weeks and remain open for participation for 6 – 12 months. Individual articles within a Research Topic are published as soon as they are ready.

    Find out more about our Research Topics

  • Our fee support program ensures that all articles that pass peer review, including those published in Research Topics, can benefit from open access – regardless of the author's field or funding situation.

    Authors and institutions with insufficient funding can apply for a discount on their publishing fees. A fee support application form is available on our website.

  • In line with our mission to promote healthy lives on a healthy planet, we do not provide printed materials. All our articles and ebooks are available under a CC-BY license, so you can share and print copies.

Manuscripts can be submitted to this Research Topic via the main journal or any other participating journal.