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Circadian clocks are intracellular molecular mechanisms that allow the cell to anticipate the time of day. We have previously reported that the intact rat heart expresses the major components of the circadian clock, of which its rhythmic expression in vivo is consistent with the operation of a fully functional clock mechanism. The present study exposes oscillations of circadian clock genes [brain and arylhydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like protein 1 (bmal1), reverse strand of the c-erbaalpha gene (rev-erbaalpha), period 2 (per2), albumin D-element binding protein (dbp)] for isolated adult rat cardiomyocytes in culture. Acute (2 h) and/or chronic (continuous) treatment of cardiomyocytes with FCS (50% and 2.5%, respectively) results in rhythmic expression of circadian clock genes with periodicities of 20-24 h. In contrast, cardiomyocytes cultured in the absence of serum exhibit dramatically dampened oscillations in bmal1 and dbp only. Zeitgebers (timekeepers) are factors that influence the timing of the circadian clock. Glucose, which has been previously shown to reactivate circadian clock gene oscillations in fibroblasts, has no effect on the expression of circadian clock genes in adult rat cardiomyocytes, either in the absence or presence of serum. Exposure of adult rat cardiomyocytes to the sympathetic neurotransmitter norephinephrine (10 microM) for 2 h reinitiates rhythmic expression of circadian clock genes in a serum-independent manner. Oscillations in circadian clock genes were associated with 24-h oscillations in the metabolic genes pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (pdk4) and uncoupling protein 3 (ucp3). In conclusion, these data suggest that the circadian clock operates within the myocytes of the heart and that this molecular mechanism persists under standard cell culture conditions (i.e., 2.5% serum). Furthermore, our data suggest that norepinephrine, unlike glucose, influences the timing of the circadian clock within the heart and that the circadian clock may be a novel mechanism regulating myocardial metabolism.  相似文献   

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Abstract

Circadian rhythms are an integral part of life. These rhythms are apparent in virtually all biological processes studies to date, ranging from the individual cell (e.g. DNA synthesis) to the whole organism (e.g. behaviors such as physical activity). Oscillations in metabolism have been characterized extensively in various organisms, including mammals. These metabolic rhythms often parallel behaviors such as sleep/wake and fasting/feeding cycles that occur on a daily basis. What has become increasingly clear over the past several decades is that many metabolic oscillations are driven by cell-autonomous circadian clocks, which orchestrate metabolic processes in a temporally appropriate manner. During the process of identifying the mechanisms by which clocks influence metabolism, molecular-based studies have revealed that metabolism should be considered an integral circadian clock component. The implications of such an interrelationship include the establishment of a vicious cycle during cardiometabolic disease states, wherein metabolism-induced perturbations in the circadian clock exacerbate metabolic dysfunction. The purpose of this review is therefore to highlight recent insights gained regarding links between cell-autonomous circadian clocks and metabolism and the implications of clock dysfunction in the pathogenesis of cardiometabolic diseases.  相似文献   

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《Chronobiology international》2013,30(10):1458-1468
Synchrony between circadian and metabolic processes is critical to the maintenance of energy homeostasis. Studies on essence of chicken (EC), a chicken meat extract rich in proteins, amino acids and peptides, showed its effectiveness in alleviating fatigue and promoting metabolism. A recent study revealed that it facilitated the re-entrainment of clock genes (Bmal1, Cry1, Dec1, Per1 and Per2) in the pineal gland and liver in a rat model of circadian disruption. Here, we investigated the role of EC-facilitated circadian synchrony in the maintenance of the energy homeostasis using a mouse model of prolonged circadian disruption. Prolonged circadian disruption (12 weeks) resulted in hepatic maladaptation, manifested by a mild but significant (p?<?0.05) hepatomegaly, accompanied by disturbed hepatic lipid metabolism and liver injury (indicated by increased circulating hepatic enzymes). Evidently, there was marked elevations of hepatic inflammatory mediators (interleukin-1beta and interleukin-6), suggesting an underlying inflammation leading to the hepatic injury and functional impairment. Importantly, the disruption paradigm caused the decoupling between key metabolic regulators (e.g. mTOR and AMPK) and hepatic clock genes (Per1, Cry1, Dec1, Bmal1). Further, we showed that the loss of circadian synchrony between the master and hepatic clock genes (Per1, Cry1, Dec1, Bmal1) could be the underlying cause of the maladaptation. When supplemented with EC, the functional impairment and inflammation were abolished. The protective effects could be linked to its effectiveness in maintaining the synchrony between the master and hepatic clocks, and the resultant improved coupling of the circadian oscillators (Per1, Cry1, Dec1, Bmal1) and metabolic regulators (mTOR, AMPK). Overall, EC supplementation promoted the physiological adaptation to the prolonged circadian disruption through facilitation of endogenous circadian synchrony and the coupling of circadian oscillators and metabolic regulators. This forms an important basis for further elucidation of the physiological benefits of EC-facilitated circadian synchrony.  相似文献   

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To be prepared for alternating metabolic demands occurring over the 24‐hour day, the body preserves information on time in skeletal muscle, and in all cells, through a circadian‐clock mechanism. Skeletal muscle can be considered the largest collection of peripheral clocks in the body, with a major contribution to whole‐body energy metabolism. Comparison of circadian‐clock gene expression between skeletal muscle of nocturnal rodents and diurnal humans reveals very common patterns based on rest/active cycles rather than light/dark cycles. Rodent studies in which the circadian clock is disrupted in skeletal muscle demonstrate impaired glucose handling and insulin resistance. Experimental circadian misalignment in humans modifies the skeletal‐muscle clocks and leads to disturbed energy metabolism and insulin resistance. Preclinical studies have revealed that timing of exercise over the day can influence the beneficial effects of exercise on skeletal‐muscle metabolism, and studies suggest similar applicability in humans. Current strategies to improve metabolic health (e.g., exercise) should be reinvestigated in their capability to modify the skeletal‐muscle clocks by taking timing of the intervention into account.  相似文献   

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The circadian timing system plays a key role in orchestrating lipid metabolism. In concert with the solar cycle, the circadian system ensures that daily rhythms in lipid absorption, storage, and transport are temporally coordinated with rest-activity and feeding cycles. At the cellular level, genes involved in lipid synthesis and fatty acid oxidation are rhythmically activated and repressed by core clock proteins in a tissue-specific manner. Consequently, loss of clock gene function or misalignment of circadian rhythms with feeding cycles (e.g., in shift work) results in impaired lipid homeostasis. Herein, we review recent progress in circadian rhythms research using lipidomics, i.e., large-scale profiling of lipid metabolites, to characterize circadian-regulated lipid pathways in mammals. In mice, novel regulatory circuits involved in fatty acid metabolism have been identified in adipose tissue, liver, and muscle. Extensive diversity in circadian regulation of plasma lipids has also been revealed in humans using lipidomics and other metabolomics approaches. In future studies, lipidomics platforms will be increasingly used to better understand the effects of genetic variation, shift work, food intake, and drugs on circadian-regulated lipid pathways and metabolic health.  相似文献   

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Malfunction of the circadian timing system may result in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, and conversely, these diseases can impair the circadian system. The aim of this study was to reveal whether the functional state of the circadian system of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) differs from that of control Wistar rat. This study is the first to analyze the function of the circadian system of SHR in its complexity, i.e., of the central clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) as well as of the peripheral clocks. The functional properties of the SCN clock were estimated by behavioral output rhythm in locomotor activity and daily profiles of clock gene expression in the SCN determined by in situ hybridization. The function of the peripheral clocks was assessed by daily profiles of clock gene expression in the liver and colon by RT-PCR and in vitro using real time recording of Bmal1-dLuc reporter. The potential impact of the SHR phenotype on circadian control of the metabolic pathways was estimated by daily profiles of metabolism-relevant gene expression in the liver and colon. The results revealed that SHR exhibited an early chronotype, because the central SCN clock was phase advanced relative to light/dark cycle and the SCN driven output rhythm ran faster compared to Wistar rats. Moreover, the output rhythm was dampened. The SHR peripheral clock reacted to the dampened SCN output with tissue-specific consequences. In the colon of SHR the clock function was severely altered, whereas the differences are only marginal in the liver. These changes may likely result in a mutual desynchrony of circadian oscillators within the circadian system of SHR, thereby potentially contributing to metabolic pathology of the strain. The SHR may thus serve as a valuable model of human circadian disorders originating in poor synchrony of the circadian system with external light/dark regime.  相似文献   

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Modern systems biology permits the study of complex networks, such as circadian clocks, and the use of complex methodologies, such as quantitative genetics. However, it is difficult to combine these approaches due to factorial expansion in experiments when networks are examined using complex methods. We developed a genomic quantitative genetic approach to overcome this problem, allowing us to examine the function(s) of the plant circadian clock in different populations derived from natural accessions. Using existing microarray data, we defined 24 circadian time phase groups (i.e., groups of genes with peak phases of expression at particular times of day). These groups were used to examine natural variation in circadian clock function using existing single time point microarray experiments from a recombinant inbred line population. We identified naturally variable loci that altered circadian clock outputs and linked these circadian quantitative trait loci to preexisting metabolomics quantitative trait loci, thereby identifying possible links between clock function and metabolism. Using single-gene isogenic lines, we found that circadian clock output was altered by natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana secondary metabolism. Specifically, genetic manipulation of a secondary metabolic enzyme led to altered free-running rhythms. This represents a unique and valuable approach to the study of complex networks using quantitative genetics.  相似文献   

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Behavioral and Serotonergic Regulation of Circadian Rhythms   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Endogenous depression is often accompanied by alterations in core parameters of circadian rhythms, and antidepressant treatments, including serotonergic drugs, sleep deprivation and exercise, alter circadian phase or period in humans or animal models. Antidepressants may act in part through the circadian system, and behavioral antidepressants through a common serotonergic path to the clock. This review evaluates the evidence from animal models that serotonin (5-HT) mediates phase-shifting effects of behavioral stimuli on circadian rhythms. In rodents, 'exercise' stimulated during the rest phase of the rest-activity cycle induces large phase shifts of circadian rhythms. These shifts can be mimicked by short-term sleep deprivation without intense activity. During wheel running or sleep deprivation, 5-HT release in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) circadian clock is significantly elevated. Lesions of 5-HT afferents to the SCN attenuate phase shifts or entrainment induced by activity in response to some stimuli (e.g., triazolam injections in hamsters, treadmill running in mice) but not others (e.g., novel wheel confinement in hamsters). Antagonists selective to 5HT1, 2 or 7 receptors do not attenuate shifts induced by wheel running, although 5-HT2/7 antagonists do partially block shifts to saline injections. 5-HT agonists (e.g., 8-OH-DPAT) induce large shifts in vitro, but much smaller shifts in vivo, particularly if administered directly to the SCN. Procedures for inducing 5-HT supersensitivity in vivo result in larger shifts to 8-OH-DPAT. 5-HT stimuli may affect the clock by direct and indirect pathways, particularly through the thalamic intergeniculate leaflet, and the role of these pathways may differ across species. At the level of the SCN, 5-HT likely acts through 5-HT7 receptors on neurons and possibly also glial cells. These receptors may be useful targets for the development of antidepressant drugs. In aggregate, the literature provides mixed support for the hypothesis that exercise or behavioral arousal shift the circadian clock by a 5-HT pathway; the role of indirect pathways, interactions with other transmitters, cellular adaptations to denervation, glial cells, and species differences remain to be more fully clarified. Serotonergic and behavioral stimuli provide an intriguing route to elucidate the circadian clockworks and their possible role in depression.  相似文献   

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Chrononutrition proposes that nutrients or meal timing per se could affect the circadian clock system, and that the desynchronization of biological rhythms could negatively influence timing and food choices. Research in this area has suggested that mealtime, energy distribution throughout the day, nocturnal eating and food ingestion frequency may influence nutrient metabolism, being associated with metabolic and nutritional diseases. Given the growing amount of evidence linking the circadian clock system to metabolic and nutritional health, circadian organization seems to be clinically important in the understanding of diseases such as obesity and, maybe, in the nutritional treatment of them. Thus, chrononutrition emerges as an important tool to enhance the metabolic and nutritional health of particular population groups (e.g. shift workers) and in the treatment of diseases such as obesity. For this reason, the area needs to be further explored.  相似文献   

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Endogenous depression is often accompanied by alterations in core parameters of circadian rhythms, and antidepressant treatments, including serotonergic drugs, sleep deprivation and exercise, alter circadian phase or period in humans or animal models. Antidepressants may act in part through the circadian system, and behavioral antidepressants through a common serotonergic path to the clock. This review evaluates the evidence from animal models that serotonin (5-HT) mediates phase-shifting effects of behavioral stimuli on circadian rhythms. In rodents, 'exercise' stimulated during the rest phase of the rest-activity cycle induces large phase shifts of circadian rhythms. These shifts can be mimicked by short-term sleep deprivation without intense activity. During wheel running or sleep deprivation, 5-HT release in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) circadian clock is significantly elevated. Lesions of 5-HT afferents to the SCN attenuate phase shifts or entrainment induced by activity in response to some stimuli (e.g., triazolam injections in hamsters, treadmill running in mice) but not others (e.g., novel wheel confinement in hamsters). Antagonists selective to 5HT1, 2 or 7 receptors do not attenuate shifts induced by wheel running, although 5-HT2/7 antagonists do partially block shifts to saline injections. 5-HT agonists (e.g., 8-OH-DPAT) induce large shifts in vitro, but much smaller shifts in vivo, particularly if administered directly to the SCN. Procedures for inducing 5-HT supersensitivity in vivo result in larger shifts to 8-OH-DPAT. 5-HT stimuli may affect the clock by direct and indirect pathways, particularly through the thalamic intergeniculate leaflet, and the role of these pathways may differ across species. At the level of the SCN, 5-HT likely acts through 5-HT7 receptors on neurons and possibly also glial cells. These receptors may be useful targets for the development of antidepressant drugs. In aggregate, the literature provides mixed support for the hypothesis that exercise or behavioral arousal shift the circadian clock by a 5-HT pathway; the role of indirect pathways, interactions with other transmitters, cellular adaptations to denervation, glial cells, and species differences remain to be more fully clarified. Serotonergic and behavioral stimuli provide an intriguing route to elucidate the circadian clockworks and their possible role in depression.  相似文献   

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