4.6 Article

Chronodisruption by chronic jetlag impacts metabolic and gastrointestinal homeostasis in male mice

Journal

ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA
Volume 233, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/apha.13703

Keywords

Arntl Knock Out; circadian clock; colonic crypts; gastrointestinal hormones; chronic jetlag; short-chain fatty acids

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Funding

  1. FWO-SB grant [1S27618N]

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Chronic jetlag disrupts the circadian rhythms of fecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and mucosal clock genes, leading to changes in gut epithelial marker expression and alterations in gut function. These findings highlight the importance of feeding cues in synchronizing peripheral clocks and maintaining metabolic homeostasis.
Aim Chronodisruption desynchronizes peripheral clocks and leads to metabolic diseases. Feeding cues are important synchronizers of peripheral clocks and influence rhythmic oscillations in intestinal microbiota and their metabolites. We investigated whether chronic jetlag, mimicking frequent time zone travelling, affected the diurnal fluctuations in faecal short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) levels, that feed back to the gut clock to regulate rhythmicity in gut function. Methods Rhythms in faecal SCFAs levels and in the expression of clock genes and epithelial markers were measured in the colonic mucosa of control and jetlagged mice. The entraining effect of SCFAs on the rhythm in clock gene mRNA expression was studied in primary colonic crypts. The role of the circadian clock in epithelial marker expression was studied in Arntl(-/-) mice. Results Chronic jetlag increased body weight gain and abolished the day/night food intake pattern which resulted in a phase-delay in the rhythm of faecal SCFAs that paralleled the shift in the expression of mucosal clock genes. This effect was mimicked by stimulation of primary colonic crypts from control mice with SCFAs. Jetlag abolished the rhythm in Tnf alpha, proglucagon and ghrelin expression but not in the expression of tight junction markers. Only a dampening in plasma glucagon-like peptide-1 but not in ghrelin levels was observed. Rhythms in ghrelin but not proglucagon mRNA expression were abolished in Arntl(-/-) mice. Conclusion The altered food intake pattern during chronodisruption corresponds with the changes in rhythmicity of SCFA levels that entrain clock genes to affect rhythms in mRNA expression of gut epithelial markers.

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