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Researchers find how liver cells control biological clock

ANI May 18, 2023

To control their activity according to the time of day, organisms rely on a biological clock known as the 'circadian' clock.


A central clock, made up of a collection of brain cells known as suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), synchronises the circadian clocks found in the body's organs, known as 'peripheral' clocks.

Until today, it was considered that synchronisation of the circadian cycle in mammals was a one-way process in which the suprachiasmatic nuclei alone synchronised the peripheral clocks.

However, researchers from CNRS, Universite Paris Cite1, and the University of Queensland have recently demonstrated that the liver regulates peripheral clocks as part of a collaborative EU effort.

Teams tested an experimental model with a liver containing human hepatocytes and discovered that the normally nocturnal model's daily cycle had advanced by two hours.

The experimental subjects became active and fed two hours before nightfall, thus becoming partly diurnal. The researchers believe this shift comes from the subject's central clock being taken over by the human liver cells in this experimental model.

These cells can thus affect the entire rhythmic physiology of the animals, including the clocks of the peripheral organs. Findings suggested that a change in the liver clock, for example in pathological conditions such as cirrhosis, could affect the synchronisation function of the central clock.

This in turn could affect the entire circadian physiology, including the sleep/wake cycle, and contribute to the development of metabolic disease. It also suggests that restoring disrupted liver biological rhythm could benefit the entire body's metabolism.

The hormonal and nervous mechanisms driving this dialogue between the brain, liver and biological clock remain to be identified.

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