Cell Reports (Aug 2024)

Misaligned feeding uncouples daily rhythms within brown adipose tissue and between peripheral clocks

  • Victoria A. Acosta-Rodríguez,
  • Filipa Rijo-Ferreira,
  • Laura van Rosmalen,
  • Mariko Izumo,
  • Noheon Park,
  • Chryshanthi Joseph,
  • Chelsea Hepler,
  • Anneke K. Thorne,
  • Jeremy Stubblefield,
  • Joseph Bass,
  • Carla B. Green,
  • Joseph S. Takahashi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 8
p. 114523

Abstract

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Summary: Extended food consumption during the rest period perturbs the phase relationship between circadian clocks in the periphery and the brain, leading to adverse health effects. Beyond the liver, how metabolic organs respond to a timed hypocaloric diet is largely unexplored. We investigated how feeding schedules impacted circadian gene expression in epididymal white and brown adipose tissue (eWAT and BAT) compared to the liver and hypothalamus. We restricted food to either daytime or nighttime in C57BL/6J male mice, with or without caloric restriction. Unlike the liver and eWAT, rhythmic clock genes in the BAT remained insensitive to feeding time, similar to the hypothalamus. We uncovered an internal split within the BAT in response to conflicting environmental cues, displaying inverted oscillations on a subset of metabolic genes without modifying its local core circadian machinery. Integrating tissue-specific responses on circadian transcriptional networks with metabolic outcomes may help elucidate the mechanism underlying the health burden of eating at unusual times.

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