Pinealectomy interferes with the circadian clock genes expression in white adipose tissue

Date
2015-04-01Author
Mendes de Farias, Talita da Silva
Oliveira, Ariclecio Cunha de
Andreotti, Sandra
Amaral, Fernanda Gaspar do [UNIFESP]
Chimin, Patricia
Alves de Proenca, Andre Ricardo
Leonardo Torres Leal, Francisco
Laurato Sertie, Rogerio Antonio
Campana, Amanda Baron
Lopes, Andressa Bolsoni
Souza, Arnaldo Henrique de
Cipolla-Neto, Jose
Lima, Fabio Bessa
Type
ArtigoISSN
0742-3098Is part of
Journal of Pineal ResearchDOI
10.1111/jpi.12211Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Melatonin, the main hormone produced by the pineal gland, is secreted in a circadian manner (24-hr period), and its oscillation influences several circadian biological rhythms, such as the regulation of clock genes expression (chronobiotic effect) and the modulation of several endocrine functions in peripheral tissues. Assuming that the circadian synchronization of clock genes can play a role in the regulation of energy metabolism and it is influenced by melatonin, our study was designed to assess possible alterations as a consequence of melatonin absence on the circadian expression of clock genes in the epididymal adipose tissue of male Wistar rats and the possible metabolic repercussions to this tissue. Our data show that pinealectomy indeed has impacts on molecular events: it abolishes the daily pattern of the expression of Clock, Per2, and Cry1 clock genes and Ppar expression, significantly increases the amplitude of daily expression of Rev-erb, and affects the pattern of and impairs adipokine production, leading to a decrease in leptin levels. However, regarding some metabolic aspects of adipocyte functions, such as its ability to synthesize triacylglycerols from glucose along 24hr, was not compromised by pinealectomy, although the daily profile of the lipogenic enzymes expression (ATP-citrate lyase, malic enzyme, fatty acid synthase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) was abolished in pinealectomized animals.
Citation
Journal of Pineal Research. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, v. 58, n. 3, p. 251-261, 2015.Sponsorship
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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- EPM - Artigos [17701]