| Literature DB >> 20890745 |
L A Sadacca1, K A Lamia, A S deLemos, B Blum, C J Weitz.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Loss of circadian clocks from all tissues causes defective glucose homeostasis as well as loss of feeding and activity rhythms. Little is known about peripheral tissue clocks, so we tested the hypothesis that an intrinsic circadian clock of the pancreas is important for glucose homeostasis.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20890745 PMCID: PMC2995870 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-010-1920-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1Glucose intolerance and defective insulin secretion in mice selectively lacking an intrinsic circadian clock of the pancreas. a Presence of an autonomous circadian clock in the pancreas. Real-time bioluminescence output of an explanted pancreas from a Bmal1-Luc circadian reporter mouse [7]. b Combined immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridisation to pancreas sections showing co-presence of insulin protein (red) and circadian clock component mRNA Per1 and Bmal1 as labelled (both green) in pancreatic islets. Punctate appearance of fluorescence signal for mRNAs is typical. Hoechst stain (blue) shows positions of cell nuclei. Arrows, double-labelled cells. c Glucose tolerance test performed at Zeitgeber time (ZT) 4.5 h in mice selectively lacking circadian clocks in the pancreas (Panc-Bmal1 ; C57BL/6-129 hybrid) and littermate control genotypes. Mice used: Bmal1 , Bmal1 conditional allele homozygote without Cre; Pdx1-Cre, single copy of Cre transgene and wild-type Bmal1. p < 0.001 (ANOVA). d Insulin tolerance tests, as above (c). No significant difference between genotypes (ANOVA). e Serum insulin concentrations at the indicated times after glucose administration. p < 0.02 (ANOVA). f Circadian profile of glucose tolerance for the three genotypes (n = 9–10 per genotype). g Quantification of circadian glucose tolerance curves shown above (f). CT, circadian time for all groups as for dark grey bars. c–g Values are mean±SEM. Light grey, Pdx1-Cre; dark grey, Bmal1 ; black, Panc-Bmal1
Fig. 2Defective glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from pancreatic islets of mice selectively lacking an intrinsic circadian clock of the pancreas. a Normal general appearance of pancreatic islets in Panc-Bmal1 mice vs Pdx-Cre. Immunofluorescence micrographs of pancreas sections were stained for insulin. b–d No significant differences were detected between Panc-Bmal1 mice and littermate controls in variables reflecting the number, size or insulin expression of pancreatic islets (Student’s t test). e Defective insulin secretion from isolated islets of Panc-Bmal1 mice under low and high glucose conditions, † p = 0.03, ‡ p = 0.002 (Student’s t test). f No significant difference in total insulin content of isolated islets from Panc-Bmal1 mice and control littermates (Student’s t test). b–f Values are mean±SEM. Light grey, Pdx1-Cre; black, Panc-Bmal1