4.7 Article

A molecular circadian clock operates in the parathyroid gland and is disturbed in chronic kidney disease associated bone and mineral disorder

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 98, Issue 6, Pages 1461-1475

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2020.06.034

Keywords

aorta; CKD; secondary hyperparathyroidism; PTH; vascular calcification

Funding

  1. Eva and Henry Fraenkel Foundation
  2. Kirsten and Freddy Johansen Foundation
  3. Helen and Ejnar Bjoernow Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Circadian rhythms in metabolism, hormone secretion, cell cycle and locomotor activity are regulated by a molecular circadian clock with the master clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the central nervous system. However, an internal clock is also expressed in several peripheral tissues. Although about 10% of all genes are regulated by clock machinery an internal molecular circadian clock in the parathyroid glands has not previously been investigated. Parathyroid hormone secretion exhibits a diurnal variation and parathyroid hormone gene promoter contains an E-box like element, a known target of circadian clock proteins. Therefore, we examined whether an internal molecular circadian clock is operating in parathyroid glands, whether it is entrained by feeding and how it responds to chronic kidney disease. As uremia is associated with extreme parathyroid growth and since disturbed circadian rhythm is related to abnormal growth, we examined the expression of parathyroid clock and clock-regulated cell cycle genes in parathyroid glands of normal and uremic rats. Circadian clock genes were found to be rhythmically expressed in normal parathyroid glands and this clock was minimally entrained by feeding. Diurnal regulation of parathyroid glands was next examined. Significant rhythmicity of fibroblast-growth-factor-receptor-1, MafB and Gata3 was found. In uremic rats, deregulation of circadian clock genes and the cell cycle regulators, Cyclin D1, c-Myc, Wee1 and p27, which are influenced by the circadian clock, was found in parathyroid glands as well as the aorta. Thus, a circadian clock operates in parathyroid glands and this clock and downstream cell cycle regulators are disturbed in uremia and may contribute to dysregulated parathyroid proliferation in secondary hyperparathyroidism.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available