Journal
JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 245, Issue 1, Pages 155-164Publisher
BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/JOE-20-0011
Keywords
night-time restricted feeding; circadian clock; short-chain fatty acids; ghrelin
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Funding
- Methusalem grant from the KU Leuven
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The known crosstalk between short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and the circadian clock is tightly intertwined with feeding time. We aimed to investigate the role of the core clock gene Bmal1 and feeding time in the diurnal rhythms in plasma and caecal SCFA levels and in their effect on the release of the hunger hormone ghrelin in the stomach and colon. WT, Bmal1(-/-) (ad libitum fed) and night-time-restricted-fed (RF)-Bmal1(-/-) littermates were killed at zeitgeber time (ZT) 4 and 16. SCFA concentrations were measured by gas chromatography. To investigate the effect of SCFAs on ghrelin re lease, stomach and colonic full-thickness strips were incubated with Krebs or a SCFA mix mimicking plasma or caecal concentrations, after which octanoyl ghrelin release was measured by RIA. Diurnal rhythms in caecal and plasma SCFAs oscillated in phase but rhythmic changes were abolished in Bmal1(-/-) mice. RF of Bmal1(-/-) mice restored fluctuations in caecal SCFAs. Plasma SCFA concentrations failed to affect gastric ghrelin rele ase. The effect of caecal SCFA concentrations on colonic ghrelin release was rhythmic (in hibition at ZT 4, no effect at ZT 16). In Bmal1(-/-) mice, the inhibitory effect of SCFAs at ZT 4 was abolished. RF Bmal1(-/-) mice restored the inhibitory effect and increased colonic Clock expression. To conclude, diurnal fluctuations in caecal SCFAs and the effect of SCFAs on colonic ghrelin release are regulated by feeding time, independent of the core clock gene Bmal1. However, local entrainment of other clock genes might contribute to the observed effects.
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