Literature DB >> 19878276

Peripheral oscillators: the driving force for food-anticipatory activity.

Carolina Escobar1, Cathy Cailotto, Manuel Angeles-Castellanos, Roberto Salgado Delgado, Ruud M Buijs.   

Abstract

Food-anticipatory activity (FAA) and especially the food-entrained oscillator (FEO) have driven many scientists to seek their mechanisms and locations. Starting our research on FAA we, possibly like many other scientists, were convinced that clock genes held the key to the location and the underlying mechanisms for FAA. In this review, which is aimed especially at discussing the contribution of the peripheral oscillators, we have put together the accumulating evidence that the clock gene machinery as we know it today is not sufficient to explain food entrainment. We discuss the contribution of three types of oscillating processes: (i) within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), neurons capable of maintaining a 24-h oscillation in electrical activity driven by a set of clock genes; (ii) oscillations in metabolic genes and clock genes in other parts of the brain and in peripheral organs driven by the SCN or by food, which damp out after a few cycles; (iii) an FEO which, we propose, is a system built up of different oscillatory processes and consisting of an as-yet-unidentified network of central and peripheral structures. In view of the evidence that clock genes and metabolic oscillations are not essential for the persistence of FAA we propose that food entrainment is initiated by a repeated metabolic state of scarcity that drives an oscillating network of brain nuclei in interaction with peripheral oscillators. This complex may constitute the proposed FEO and is distributed in our peripheral organs as well as within the central nervous system.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19878276     DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2009.06972.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  43 in total

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Authors:  Christopher J Morris; Daniel Aeschbach; Frank A J L Scheer
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2.  Persistence of hormonal and metabolic rhythms during fasting in 7- to 9-day-old rabbits entrained by nursing during the night.

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Journal:  Horm Behav       Date:  2010-05-20       Impact factor: 3.587

Review 3.  Food anticipation depends on oscillators and memories in both body and brain.

Authors:  Rae Silver; Peter D Balsam; Matthew P Butler; Joseph LeSauter
Journal:  Physiol Behav       Date:  2011-06-12

Review 4.  Metabolism and the circadian clock converge.

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Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 37.312

5.  Neurogenomic signatures of spatiotemporal memories in time-trained forager honey bees.

Authors:  Nicholas L Naeger; Byron N Van Nest; Jennifer N Johnson; Sam D Boyd; Bruce R Southey; Sandra L Rodriguez-Zas; Darrell Moore; Gene E Robinson
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2011-03-15       Impact factor: 3.312

6.  Food anticipation in Bmal1-/- and AAV-Bmal1 rescued mice: a reply to Fuller et al.

Authors:  Ralph E Mistlberger; Ruud M Buijs; Etienne Challet; Carolina Escobar; Glenn J Landry; Andries Kalsbeek; Paul Pevet; Shigenobu Shibata
Journal:  J Circadian Rhythms       Date:  2009-08-10

7.  In vitro and ex vivo models indicate that the molecular clock in fast skeletal muscle of Atlantic cod is not autonomous.

Authors:  Carlo C Lazado; Hiruni P S Kumaratunga; Kazue Nagasawa; Igor Babiak; Christopher Marlowe A Caipang; Jorge M O Fernandes
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2014-07-04       Impact factor: 2.316

8.  Leptin resistance is a secondary consequence of the obesity in ciliopathy mutant mice.

Authors:  Nicolas F Berbari; Raymond C Pasek; Erik B Malarkey; S M Zaki Yazdi; Andrew D McNair; Wesley R Lewis; Tim R Nagy; Robert A Kesterson; Bradley K Yoder
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Temporal Organization of the Sleep-Wake Cycle under Food Entrainment in the Rat.

Authors:  Javiera Castro-Faúndez; Javier Díaz; Adrián Ocampo-Garcés
Journal:  Sleep       Date:  2016-07-01       Impact factor: 5.849

Review 10.  Neural basis of timing and anticipatory behaviors.

Authors:  Michael C Antle; Rae Silver
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2009-10-28       Impact factor: 3.386

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