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Publication : Endurance training ameliorates the metabolic and performance characteristics of circadian Clock mutant mice.

First Author  Pastore S Year  2013
Journal  J Appl Physiol (1985) Volume  114
Issue  8 Pages  1076-84
PubMed ID  23429867 Mgi Jnum  J:322672
Mgi Id  MGI:6882251 Doi  10.1152/japplphysiol.01505.2012
Citation  Pastore S, et al. (2013) Endurance training ameliorates the metabolic and performance characteristics of circadian Clock mutant mice. J Appl Physiol (1985) 114(8):1076-84
abstractText  Circadian locomotor output cycles kaput (CLOCK) is a nuclear transcription factor that is a component of the central autoregulatory feedback loop that governs the generation of biological rhythms. Homozygous Clock mutant mice contain a truncated CLOCK(Delta19) protein within somatic cells, subsequently causing an impaired ability to rhythmically transactivate circadian genes. The present study sought to investigate whether the Clock mutation affects mitochondrial physiology within skeletal muscle, as well as the responsiveness of these mutant animals to adapt to a chronic voluntary endurance training protocol. Within muscle, Clock mutant mice displayed 44% and 45% reductions in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1-alpha (PGC-1alpha) and mitochondrial transcription factor-A protein content, respectively, and an accompanying 16% decrease in mitochondrial content, as determined by cytochrome c oxidase enzyme activity. These decrements contributed to a 50% decrease in exercise tolerance in Clock mutant mice. Interestingly, the Clock mutation did not appear to alter subsarcolemmal or intermyofibrillar mitochondrial respiration within muscle or systemic glucose tolerance. Daily locomotor activity levels were similar between wild-type and Clock mutant mice throughout the training protocol. Endurance training ameliorated the decrease in PGC-1alpha protein expression and mitochondrial content in the Clock mutant mice, eliciting a 2.9-fold improvement in exercise tolerance. Thus our data suggest that a functional CLOCK protein is essential to ensure the maintenance of mitochondrial content within muscle although the absence of a functional CLOCK protein does not impair the ability of animals to adapt to chronic exercise.
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