| Literature DB >> 34426495 |
Yaarit Adamovich1, Vaishnavi Dandavate1, Saar Ezagouri1, Gal Manella1, Ziv Zwighaft1, Jonathan Sobel1, Yael Kuperman2, Marina Golik1, Asher Auerbach3, Maxim Itkin4, Sergey Malitsky4, Gad Asher5.
Abstract
Exercise and circadian biology are closely intertwined with physiology and metabolism, yet the functional interaction between circadian clocks and exercise capacity is only partially characterized. Here, we tested different clock mutant mouse models to examine the effect of the circadian clock and clock proteins, namely PERIODs and BMAL1, on exercise capacity. We found that daytime variance in endurance exercise capacity is circadian clock controlled. Unlike wild-type mice, which outperform in the late compared with the early part of their active phase, PERIODs- and BMAL1-null mice do not show daytime variance in exercise capacity. It appears that BMAL1 impairs and PERIODs enhance exercise capacity in a daytime-dependent manner. An analysis of liver and muscle glycogen stores as well as muscle lipid utilization suggested that these daytime effects mostly relate to liver glycogen levels and correspond to the animals' feeding behavior. Furthermore, given that exercise capacity responds to training, we tested the effect of training at different times of the day and found that training in the late compared with the early part of the active phase improves exercise performance. Overall, our findings suggest that clock proteins shape exercise capacity in a daytime-dependent manner through changes in liver glycogen levels, likely due to their effect on animals' feeding behavior.Entities:
Keywords: circadian clocks; exercise; glycogen; metabolism; training
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34426495 PMCID: PMC8536342 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2101115118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205