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Diet-Induced Circadian Enhancer Remodeling Synchronizes Opposing Hepatic Lipid Metabolic Processes.

Citation
Guan, D., et al. “Diet-Induced Circadian Enhancer Remodeling Synchronizes Opposing Hepatic Lipid Metabolic Processes.”. Cell, pp. 831-842.e12.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Featured
Author Dongyin Guan, Ying Xiong, Patricia C Borck, Cholsoon Jang, Paschalis-Thomas Doulias, Romeo Papazyan, Bin Fang, Chunjie Jiang, Yuxiang Zhang, Erika R Briggs, Wenxiang Hu, David Steger, Harry Ischiropoulos, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Mitchell A Lazar
Keywords PPAR, SREBP, chronotherapy, circadian rhythms, diet-induced obesity, enhancers, fatty acid oxidation, fatty liver, lipogenesis
Abstract

Overnutrition disrupts circadian metabolic rhythms by mechanisms that are not well understood. Here, we show that diet-induced obesity (DIO) causes massive remodeling of circadian enhancer activity in mouse liver, triggering synchronous high-amplitude circadian rhythms of both fatty acid (FA) synthesis and oxidation. SREBP expression was rhythmically induced by DIO, leading to circadian FA synthesis and, surprisingly, FA oxidation (FAO). DIO similarly caused a high-amplitude circadian rhythm of PPARα, which was also required for FAO. Provision of a pharmacological activator of PPARα abrogated the requirement of SREBP for FAO (but not FA synthesis), suggesting that SREBP indirectly controls FAO via production of endogenous PPARα ligands. The high-amplitude rhythm of PPARα imparted time-of-day-dependent responsiveness to lipid-lowering drugs. Thus, acquisition of rhythmicity for non-core clock components PPARα and SREBP1 remodels metabolic gene transcription in response to overnutrition and enables a chronopharmacological approach to metabolic disorders.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell
Volume
174
Issue
4
Number of Pages
831-842.e12
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2018.06.031
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
30057115
PMCID
PMC6086765
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