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Journal ArticleDOI

Rhythmic neuronal activities of the rat nucleus of the solitary tract are impaired by high-fat diet - implications for daily control of satiety.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a combination of immunohistochemical and electrophysiological approaches together with daily monitoring of body weight and food intake to interrogate how the neuronal rhythms of the dorsal vagal complex of the brainstem are affected by a high-fat diet.
Abstract: Temporal partitioning of daily food intake is crucial for survival and involves the integration of internal circadian states and external influences such as the light-dark cycle and dietary composition. These intrinsic and extrinsic factors are interdependent with misalignment of circadian rhythms promoting body weight gain, while consumption of a calorie-dense diet elevates the risk of obesity and blunts circadian rhythms. Recently, we defined the circadian properties of the dorsal vagal complex of the brainstem, a structure implicated in the control of food intake and autonomic tone, but whether and how 24 h rhythms in this area are influenced by diet remains unresolved. Here we focused on a key structure of this complex, the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). We used a combination of immunohistochemical and electrophysiological approaches together with daily monitoring of body weight and food intake to interrogate how the neuronal rhythms of the NTS are affected by a high-fat diet. We report that short-term consumption of a high-fat diet increases food intake during the day and blunts NTS daily rhythms in neuronal discharge. Additionally, we found that a high-fat diet dampens NTS responsiveness to metabolic neuropeptides, and decreases orexin immunoreactive fibres in this structure. These alterations occur without prominent body weight gain, suggesting that a high-fat diet acts initially to reduce activity in the NTS to disinhibit mechanisms that suppress daytime feeding. KEY POINTS: The dorsal vagal complex of the rodent hindbrain possesses intrinsic circadian timekeeping mechanisms In particular, the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) is a robust circadian oscillator, independent of the master suprachiasmatic clock Here, we reveal that rat NTS neurons display timed daily rhythms in their neuronal activity and responsiveness to ingestive cues These daily rhythms are blunted or eliminated by a short-term high-fat diet, together with increased consumption of calories during the behaviourally quiescent day Our results help us better understand the circadian control of satiety by the brainstem and its malfunctioning under a high-fat diet.
Citations
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Posted ContentDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a combination of molecular, electrophysiological, and optogenetic tools were used to evaluate intrinsic clock properties of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in male rats and mice.
Abstract: Circadian rhythmicity in mammals is sustained by the central brain clock-the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus (SCN), entrained to the ambient light-dark conditions through a dense retinal input. However, recent discoveries of autonomous clock gene expression cast doubt on the supremacy of the SCN and suggest circadian timekeeping mechanisms devolve to local brain clocks. Here, we use a combination of molecular, electrophysiological, and optogenetic tools to evaluate intrinsic clock properties of the main retinorecipient thalamic center-the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in male rats and mice. We identify the dorsolateral geniculate nucleus as a slave oscillator, which exhibits core clock gene expression exclusively in vivo. Additionally, we provide compelling evidence for intrinsic clock gene expression accompanied by circadian variation in neuronal activity in the intergeniculate leaflet and ventrolateral geniculate nucleus (VLG). Finally, our optogenetic experiments propose the VLG as a light-entrainable oscillator, whose phase may be advanced by retinal input at the beginning of the projected night. Altogether, this study for the first time demonstrates autonomous timekeeping mechanisms shaping circadian physiology of the LGN.

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The dopaminergic system is placed as a hub in the extensive network of extra-SCN circadian oscillators and the possible consequences of its daily entrainment for animal physiology and behaviour are discussed.
Abstract: Level of motivation, responsiveness to rewards and punishment, invigoration of exploratory behaviours, and motor performance are subject to daily fluctuations that emerge from circadian rhythms in neuronal activity of the midbrain’s dopaminergic system. While endogenous circadian rhythms are weak in the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra pars compacta, daily changes in expression of core clock genes, ion channels, neurotransmitter receptors, dopamine-synthesising enzymes, and dopamine transporters, accompanied by changes in electrical activity, are readily observed in these nuclei. These processes cause dopamine levels released in structures innervated by midbrain dopaminergic neurons (e.g., the striatum) to oscillate in a circadian fashion. Additionally, growing evidence show that the master circadian clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus (SCN) rhythmically influences the activity of the dopaminergic system through various intermediate targets. Thus, circadian changes in the activity of the dopaminergic system and concomitant dopamine release observed on a daily scale are likely to be generated both intrinsically and entrained by the master clock. Previous studies have shown that the information about the value and salience of stimuli perceived by the animal is encoded in the neuronal activity of brain structures innervating midbrain dopaminergic centres. Some of these structures themselves are relatively autonomous oscillators, while others exhibit a weak endogenous circadian rhythm synchronised by the SCN. Here, we place the dopaminergic system as a hub in the extensive network of extra-SCN circadian oscillators and discuss the possible consequences of its daily entrainment for animal physiology and behaviour.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated how time-of-day and high-fat diet (HFD) affect neuronal networks and the sensitivity to the metabolic information received by the dorsal medial hypothalamus (DMH).

3 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the effects of a short-term high-fat diet (HFD) on the physiology of the male rat DMH, with special attention to its day/night changes, were evaluated.
Abstract: Obesity is a growing health problem for modern society; therefore, it has become extremely important to study not only its negative implications but also its developmental mechanism. Its links to disrupted circadian rhythmicity are indisputable but are still not well studied on the cellular level. Circadian food intake and metabolism are controlled by a set of brain structures referred to as the food-entrainable oscillator, among which the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) seems to be especially heavily affected by diet-induced obesity. In this study, we evaluated the effects of a short-term high-fat diet (HFD) on the physiology of the male rat DMH, with special attention to its day/night changes. Using immunofluorescence and electrophysiology we found that both cFos immunoreactivity and electrical activity rhythms become disrupted after as few as 4 weeks of HFD consumption, so before the onset of excessive weight gain. This indicates that the DMH impairment is a possible factor in obesity development. The DMH cellular activity under an HFD became increased during the non-active daytime, which coincides with a disrupted rhythm in food intake. In order to explore the relationship between them, a separate group of rats underwent time-restricted feeding with access to food only during the nighttime. Such an approach completely abolished the disruptive effects of the HFD on the DMH clock, confirming its dependence on the feeding schedule of the animal. The presented data highlight the importance of a temporally regulated feeding pattern on the physiology of the hypothalamic center for food intake and metabolism regulation, and propose time-restricted feeding as a possible prevention of the circadian dysregulation observed under an HFD.

2 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this immunohistochemical study suggest that hypocretins are likely to have a role in physiological functions in addition to food intake such as regulation of blood pressure, the neuroendocrine system, body temperature, and the sleep–waking cycle.
Abstract: The novel neuropeptides called hypocretins (orexins) have recently been identified as being localized exclusively in cell bodies in a subregion of the tuberal part of the hypothalamus. The structure of the hypocretins, their accumulation in vesicles of axon terminals, and their excitatory effect on cultured hypothalamic neurons suggest that the hypocretins function in intercellular communication. To characterize these peptides further and to help understand what physiological functions they may serve, we undertook an immunohistochemical study to examine the distribution of preprohypocretin-immunoreactive neurons and fibers in the rat brain. Preprohypocretin-positive neurons were found in the perifornical nucleus and in the dorsal and lateral hypothalamic areas. These cells were distinct from those that express melanin-concentrating hormone. Although they represent a restricted group of cells, their projections were widely distributed in the brain. We observed labeled fibers throughout the hypothalamus. The densest extrahypothalamic projection was found in the locus coeruleus. Fibers were also seen in the septal nuclei, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, the paraventricular and reuniens nuclei of the thalamus, the zona incerta, the subthalamic nucleus, the central gray, the substantia nigra, the raphe nuclei, the parabrachial area, the medullary reticular formation, and the nucleus of the solitary tract. Less prominent projections were found in cortical regions, central and anterior amygdaloid nuclei, and the olfactory bulb. These results suggest that hypocretins are likely to have a role in physiological functions in addition to food intake such as regulation of blood pressure, the neuroendocrine system, body temperature, and the sleep–waking cycle.

3,255 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Genome-wide analyses of the clock transcriptional feedback loop have revealed a global circadian regulation of processes such as transcription factor occupancy, RNA polymerase II recruitment and initiation, nascent transcription, and chromatin remodelling.
Abstract: Circadian clocks are endogenous oscillators that control 24-hour physiological and behavioural processes in organisms. These cell-autonomous clocks are composed of a transcription-translation-based autoregulatory feedback loop. With the development of next-generation sequencing approaches, biochemical and genomic insights into circadian function have recently come into focus. Genome-wide analyses of the clock transcriptional feedback loop have revealed a global circadian regulation of processes such as transcription factor occupancy, RNA polymerase II recruitment and initiation, nascent transcription, and chromatin remodelling. The genomic targets of circadian clocks are pervasive and are intimately linked to the regulation of metabolism, cell growth and physiology.

1,538 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2001-Neuron
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that orexin-containing neurons play important roles in regulating vigilance states and energy homeostasis and the pathophysiology and treatment of narcolepsy.

1,362 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that a high-fat diet in mice leads to changes in the period of the locomotor activity rhythm and alterations in the expression and cycling of canonical circadian clock genes, nuclear receptors that regulate clock transcription factors, and clock-controlled genes involved in fuel utilization in the hypothalamus, liver, and adipose tissue.

1,289 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The history of using high-fat diets to induce obesity in animals is described, the consequences of changing the amount and type of dietary fats on weight gain, body composition and adipose tissue cellularity are clarified, and the contribution of genetics and sex is explored.
Abstract: Epidemiological studies have shown a positive relationship between dietary fat intake and obesity Since rats and mice show a similar relationship, they are considered an appropriate model for studying dietary obesity The present paper describes the history of using high-fat diets to induce obesity in animals, aims to clarify the consequences of changing the amount and type of dietary fats on weight gain, body composition and adipose tissue cellularity, and explores the contribution of genetics and sex, as well as the biochemical basis and the roles of hormones such as leptin, insulin and ghrelin in animal models of dietary obesity The major factors that contribute to dietary obesity - hyperphagia, energy density and post-ingestive effects of the dietary fat - are discussed Other factors that affect dietary obesity including feeding rhythmicity, social factors and stress are highlighted Finally, we comment on the reversibility of high-fat diet-induced obesity

758 citations

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