1.Physiological links of circadian clock and biological clock of aging.
Protein & Cell 2017;8(7):477-488
Circadian rhythms orchestrate biochemical and physiological processes in living organisms to respond the day/night cycle. In mammals, nearly all cells hold self-sustained circadian clocks meanwhile couple the intrinsic rhythms to systemic changes in a hierarchical manner. The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus functions as the master pacemaker to initiate daily synchronization according to the photoperiod, in turn determines the phase of peripheral cellular clocks through a variety of signaling relays, including endocrine rhythms and metabolic cycles. With aging, circadian desynchrony occurs at the expense of peripheral metabolic pathologies and central neurodegenerative disorders with sleep symptoms, and genetic ablation of circadian genes in model organisms resembled the aging-related features. Notably, a number of studies have linked longevity nutrient sensing pathways in modulating circadian clocks. Therapeutic strategies that bridge the nutrient sensing pathways and circadian clock might be rational designs to defy aging.
Aging
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metabolism
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pathology
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Animals
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Circadian Clocks
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Humans
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Suprachiasmatic Nucleus
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metabolism
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pathology
2.Changes in orexin-A and neuropeptide Y expression in the hypothalamus of the fasted and high-fat diet fed rats.
Eun Sung PARK ; Seong Joon YI ; Jin Sang KIM ; Heungshik S LEE ; In Se LEE ; Je Kyung SEONG ; Hee Kyung JIN ; Yeo Sung YOON
Journal of Veterinary Science 2004;5(4):295-302
This study was aimed to investigate the changes of orexin-A (OXA) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression in the hypothalamus of the fasted and high-fat diet fed rats. For the experiments, the male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were used as the model of high-fat diet-induced obesity. The mean loss of body weight (MLBW) did not show the linear pattern during the fasting; from 24 h to 84 h of fastings, the MLBW was not significantly changed. The numbers of OXA-immunoreactive (IR) neurons were decreased at 84 h of fasting compared with those in other five fasting subgroups. The NPY immunoreactivities in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) observed at 84 h of fasting were higher than that observed at 24 h of fasting. The number of OXA-IR neurons of the LHA (lateral hypothalamic area) in the high-fat (HF) diet fed group was more increased than that of the same area in the normal-fat (NF) diet fed group. The NPY immunoreactivities of the ARC and the SCN were higher in HF group than those observed in the same areas of NF group. Based on these results, it is noteworthy that the decrease of the body weight during the fast was not proportionate to the time-course, implicating a possible adaptation of the body for survival against starvation. The HF diet might activate the OXA and the NPY in the LHA to enhance food intake.
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology
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Animals
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Arcuate Nucleus/metabolism
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Dietary Fats
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Eating
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Fasting/*physiology
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Hypothalamic Area, Lateral/metabolism
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Hypothalamus/*metabolism
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Immunohistochemistry/veterinary
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Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/*metabolism
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Male
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Neuropeptide Y/*metabolism
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Neuropeptides/*metabolism
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Obesity
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley/physiology
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Suprachiasmatic Nucleus/metabolism