Short-term feeding at the wrong time is sufficient to desynchronize peripheral clocks and induce obesity with hyperphagia, physical inactivity and metabolic disorders in mice

Apr 18, 2016Metabolism: clinical and experimental

Feeding at the wrong time quickly disrupts body clocks outside the brain and leads to overeating, inactivity, and obesity in mice

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Abstract

After one week of daytime feeding, DF mice gained more weight and developed hyperphagia compared to NF mice.

  • Daytime feeding resulted in higher feed efficiency and increased adiposity in DF mice.
  • DF mice showed a significant reduction in daily running activity, potentially due to time-of-day-dependent hypothermia.
  • Increased food consumption and higher expression of appetite-related neuropeptides were observed in DF mice compared to NF mice.
  • DF mice exhibited elevated plasma leptin levels, suggesting the development of leptin resistance.
  • Higher levels of liver fat and increased expression of fat-producing genes were found in DF mice.
  • The synchronization of circadian clock genes in the liver was altered in DF mice, indicating a disconnect in metabolic rhythms.

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