4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Entrainment of the mouse circadian clock: Effects of stress, exercise, and nutrition

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 119, Issue -, Pages 129-138

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.12.026

Keywords

Clock gene; Suprachiasmatic nucleus; Liver; Glucocorticoid; Fasting; Insulin

Funding

  1. Council for Science, Technology, and Innovation
  2. Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program
  3. Technologies for Creating Next-generation Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries (funding agency: Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution, NARO)
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science [26220201]
  5. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  6. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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The circadian clock system in mammals plays a fundamental role in maintaining homeostasis. Entrainment is an important characteristic of the internal clock, by which appropriate timing is maintained according to external daily stimuli, such as light, stress, exercise, and/or food. Disorganized entrainment or a misaligned clock time, such as jet lag, increases health disturbances. The central clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei, located in the hypothalamus, receives information about arousal stimuli, such as physical stress or exercise, and changes the clock time by modifying neural activity or the expression of circadian clock genes. Although feeding stimuli cannot entrain the central clock in a normal light-dark cycle, the central clock can partially detect the metabolic status. Local clocks in the peripheral tissues, including liver and kidney, have a strong direct response to the external stimuli of stress, exercise, and/or food that is independent of the central clock. The mechanism underlying entrainment by stress/exercise is mediated by glucocorticoids, sympathetic nerves, oxidative stress, hypoxia, pH, cytokines, and temperature. Food/nutrition-induced entrainment is mediated by fasting-induced hormonal or metabolic changes and re-feeding-induced insulin or oxyntomodulin secretion. Chrono-nutrition is a clinical application based on chronobiology research. Future studies are required to elucidate the effects of eating and nutrient composition on the human circadian clock. Here, we focus on the central and peripheral clocks mostly in rodents' studies and review the findings of recent investigations of the effects of stress, exercise, and food on the entrainment system.

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