| Literature DB >> 27559298 |
Cassie Jaeger1, Shelley A Tischkau1.
Abstract
The prevalence of metabolic syndrome, a clustering of three or more risk factors that include abdominal obesity, increased blood pressure, and high levels of glucose, triglycerides, and high-density lipoproteins, has reached dangerous and costly levels worldwide. Increases in morbidity and mortality result from a combination of factors that promote altered glucose metabolism, insulin resistance, and metabolic dysfunction. Although diet and exercise are commonly touted as important determinants in the development of metabolic dysfunction, other environmental factors, including circadian clock disruption and activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) by dietary or other environmental sources, must also be considered. AhR binds a range of ligands, which prompts protein-protein interactions with other Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS)-domain-containing proteins and subsequent transcriptional activity. This review focuses on the reciprocal crosstalk between the activated AhR and the molecular circadian clock. AhR exhibits a rhythmic expression and time-dependent sensitivity to activation by AhR agonists. Conversely, AhR activation influences the amplitude and phase of expression of circadian clock genes, hormones, and the behavioral responses of the clock system to changes in environmental illumination. Both the clock and AhR status and activation play significant and underappreciated roles in metabolic homeostasis. This review highlights the state of knowledge regarding how AhR may act together with the circadian clock to influence energy metabolism. Understanding the variety of AhR-dependent mechanisms, including its interactions with the circadian timing system that promote metabolic dysfunction, reveals new targets of interest for maintenance of healthy metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: aryl hydrocarbon receptor; circadian rhythms; metabolic syndrome
Year: 2016 PMID: 27559298 PMCID: PMC4990151 DOI: 10.4137/EHI.S38343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Insights ISSN: 1178-6302
Figure 1AhR-induced circadian clock disruption. PAS-domain-containing family members are organized into class 1 and class 2 proteins. Class 1 proteins (white) can form either homodimers or heterodimers and bind to promoter sites to regulate transcription. Class 2 proteins (gray) cannot form homodimers but heterodimerize with other proteins. In the circadian system, the class 1 protein Clock binds to the class 2 protein Bmal1 and through Enhancer-box (Ebox) regions regulates circadian gene expression. AhR is a class 1 protein that binds the class 2 protein Arnt, regulating xenobiotic metabolism through DREs. PAS-domain-containing proteins can bind a variety of ligands and form diverse heterodimers, allowing for varied combinations of protein–protein interactions with other PAS-domain-containing proteins and crosstalk among signaling pathways.3 AhR and Bmal1 heterodimer formation disrupts downstream circadian signaling, promoting metabolic disorder.
Figure 2Working model of AhR regulation of the clock. Under physiological conditions (top), some level of AhR activation may occur by endogenous ligands, exposure to UV light, or the presence of ligands in the diet. AhR is regulated by the clock, and its expression pattern shows diurnal rhythmicity. AhR acts as a brake on the clock, inhibiting the ability of Clock and Bmal1 to drive transcription. When AhR is reduced (lower left), in animals with genetic deletion of one or both alleles, the brake is removed and the amplitude of clock oscillations is enhanced. When AhR is overactivated (lower right) by the presence of toxicants, or a HFD, the inhibitory actions are increased, which contributes to the dampening of the circadian oscillation. Dampened circadian oscillations are strongly associated with systemic metabolic dysfunction.