4.6 Article

Astrocytic circadian clock control of energy expenditure by transcriptional stress responses in the ventromedial hypothalamus

Journal

GLIA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/glia.24360

Keywords

astrocytes; brown adipose tissue; circadian rhythms; energy expenditure; ventromedial hypothalamus

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Hypothalamic circuits control metabolism and astrocytes play a role in integrating metabolic information. The role of the astrocytic circadian clock in energy balance regulation is unclear. A study on mice reveals that the circadian clock in astrocytes modulates energy balance through regulation of cellular stress responses.
Hypothalamic circuits compute systemic information to control metabolism. Astrocytes residing within the hypothalamus directly sense nutrients and hormones, integrating metabolic information, and modulating neuronal responses. Nevertheless, the role of the astrocytic circadian clock on the control of energy balance remains unclear. We used mice with a targeted ablation of the core-clock gene Bmal1 within Gfap-expressing astrocytes to gain insight on the role played by this transcription factor in astrocytes. While this mutation does not substantially affect the phenotype in mice fed normo-caloric diet, under high-fat diet we unmasked a thermogenic phenotype consisting of increased energy expenditure, and catabolism in brown adipose and overall metabolic improvement consisting of better glycemia control, and body composition. Transcriptomic analysis in the ventromedial hypothalamus revealed an enhanced response to moderate cellular stress, including ER-stress response, unfolded protein response and autophagy. We identified Xbp1 and Atf1 as two key transcription factors enhancing cellular stress responses. Therefore, we unveiled a previously unknown role of the astrocytic circadian clock modulating energy balance through the regulation of cellular stress responses within the VMH.

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