Feeding and adrenal entrainment stimuli are both necessary for normal circadian oscillation of peripheral clocks in mice housed under different photoperiods

Oct 7, 2014Chronobiology international

Feeding and stress signals together keep body clocks in sync in mice under different day lengths

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Abstract

Peripheral clock phase in mice may shift by 2-5 hours due to feeding patterns under different photoperiods.

  • Peripheral clocks in the liver, kidney, and salivary gland show similar waveforms across all photoperiods.
  • The phase of peripheral clocks is influenced by the timing of evening light signals but not morning signals.
  • Adrenalectomy had minimal impact on the rhythmicity and phase of peripheral clocks across photoperiods.
  • Restricted feeding with 6 meals per day advanced the phase of peripheral clocks in medium-day and long-day conditions but not in short-day conditions.
  • Impairment of circadian rhythms in the kidney and liver was observed in mice undergoing adrenalectomy combined with restricted feeding, which was reversible with dexamethasone.
  • The effect of photoperiod on the salivary gland clock phase diminished following adrenalectomy and restricted feeding.

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