Peripheral Circadian Oscillators in Mammals: Time and Food

Jun 28, 2003Journal of biological rhythms

Body clocks outside the brain in mammals: effects of time and eating

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Abstract

Daytime feeding completely inverts the phase of circadian gene expression in many peripheral tissues.

  • Peripheral cells can generate circadian rhythms but are not sensitive to light.
  • Feeding time is the primary cue for synchronizing peripheral mammalian clocks.
  • The SCN pacemaker is unaffected by feeding patterns, suggesting it synchronizes peripheral clocks through behavioral cycles.
  • Body temperature rhythms, linked to feeding and activity cycles, support circadian gene activity.
  • Chemical signals can induce circadian gene expression in cell cultures and may shift phases in live animals.
  • Dexamethasone can reset the phase of liver gene expression at any time of day.

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