Literature DB >> 22411258

Biological aging alters circadian mechanisms in murine adipose tissue depots.

Gregory M Sutton1, Andrey A Ptitsyn, Z Elizabeth Floyd, Gang Yu, Xiying Wu, Katie Hamel, Forum S Shah, Armand Centanni, Kenneth Eilertsen, Indu Kheterpal, Susan Newman, Claudia Leonardi, Michael A Freitas, Bruce A Bunnell, Jeffrey M Gimble.   

Abstract

Biological aging alters the metabolism and volume of adipose tissue depots. Recent evidence suggests that circadian mechanisms play a role in promoting adipogenesis, obesity, and lipodystrophy. The current study compared cohorts of younger (5-9 months) and older (24-28 months) C57BL/6 mice as a function of biological age and circadian time. Advanced age significantly reduced the weight of the brown, epididymal, inguinal, and retroperitoneal adipose depots but not total body weight. The older mice reduced their physical activity by >50% and delayed their activity initiation after light offset. The expressed transcriptome in brown and white adipose depots and liver of both cohorts displayed evidence of circadian rhythmicity; however, the oscillating mRNAs differed significantly between age groups and across tissues. The amplitude of Cry1, a component of the negative arm of the circadian apparatus, and downstream regulators such as Rev-erbα were elevated in the older relative to the younger cohorts as a function of circadian time. Overall, transcript levels differed significantly for 557 (inguinal adipose), 1,016 (liver), and 1,021 (brown adipose) expressed sequences between the cohorts as a function of age. These included transcripts encoding proteins within the canonical and non-canonical Wnt pathways. Since the Wnt pathway regulates adipose stem cell differentiation and shares a critical enzyme, glycogen synthase kinase 3β, with the circadian mechanism, the intersection between these two fundamental regulatory mechanisms merits further investigation with respect to biological aging of adipose tissues.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22411258      PMCID: PMC3636385          DOI: 10.1007/s11357-012-9389-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Age (Dordr)        ISSN: 0161-9152


  105 in total

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Journal:  J Biomed Sci       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 8.410

2.  Aging selectively dampens oscillation of lipid abundance in white and brown adipose tissue.

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  2 in total

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