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Publication : REV-ERB in GABAergic neurons controls diurnal hepatic insulin sensitivity.

First Author  Ding G Year  2021
Journal  Nature Volume  592
Issue  7856 Pages  763-767
PubMed ID  33762728 Mgi Jnum  J:310154
Mgi Id  MGI:6710186 Doi  10.1038/s41586-021-03358-w
Citation  Ding G, et al. (2021) REV-ERB in GABAergic neurons controls diurnal hepatic insulin sensitivity. Nature 592(7856):763-767
abstractText  Systemic insulin sensitivity shows a diurnal rhythm with a peak upon waking(1,2). The molecular mechanism that underlies this temporal pattern is unclear. Here we show that the nuclear receptors REV-ERB-alpha and REV-ERB-beta (referred to here as 'REV-ERB') in the GABAergic (gamma-aminobutyric acid-producing) neurons in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) (SCN(GABA) neurons) control the diurnal rhythm of insulin-mediated suppression of hepatic glucose production in mice, without affecting diurnal eating or locomotor behaviours during regular light-dark cycles. REV-ERB regulates the rhythmic expression of genes that are involved in neurotransmission in the SCN, and modulates the oscillatory firing activity of SCN(GABA) neurons. Chemogenetic stimulation of SCN(GABA) neurons at waking leads to glucose intolerance, whereas restoration of the temporal pattern of either SCN(GABA) neuron firing or REV-ERB expression rescues the time-dependent glucose metabolic phenotype caused by REV-ERB depletion. In individuals with diabetes, an increased level of blood glucose after waking is a defining feature of the 'extended dawn phenomenon'(3,4). Patients with type 2 diabetes with the extended dawn phenomenon exhibit a differential temporal pattern of expression of REV-ERB genes compared to patients with type 2 diabetes who do not have the extended dawn phenomenon. These findings provide mechanistic insights into how the central circadian clock regulates the diurnal rhythm of hepatic insulin sensitivity, with implications for our understanding of the extended dawn phenomenon in type 2 diabetes.
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