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Publication : Fasting Imparts a Switch to Alternative Daily Pathways in Liver and Muscle.

First Author  Kinouchi K Year  2018
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  25
Issue  12 Pages  3299-3314.e6
PubMed ID  30566858 Mgi Jnum  J:271126
Mgi Id  MGI:6278820 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2018.11.077
Citation  Kinouchi K, et al. (2018) Fasting Imparts a Switch to Alternative Daily Pathways in Liver and Muscle. Cell Rep 25(12):3299-3314.e6
abstractText  The circadian clock operates as intrinsic time-keeping machinery to preserve homeostasis in response to the changing environment. While food is a known zeitgeber for clocks in peripheral tissues, it remains unclear how lack of food influences clock function. We demonstrate that the transcriptional response to fasting operates through molecular mechanisms that are distinct from time-restricted feeding regimens. First, fasting affects core clock genes and proteins, resulting in blunted rhythmicity of BMAL1 and REV-ERBalpha both in liver and skeletal muscle. Second, fasting induces a switch in temporal gene expression through dedicated fasting-sensitive transcription factors such as GR, CREB, FOXO, TFEB, and PPARs. Third, the rhythmic genomic response to fasting is sustainable by prolonged fasting and reversible by refeeding. Thus, fasting imposes specialized dynamics of transcriptional coordination between the clock and nutrient-sensitive pathways, thereby achieving a switch to fasting-specific temporal gene regulation.
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