2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.09.08.506890
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Mice with humanized livers reveal the involvement of hepatocyte circadian clocks in rhythmic behavior and physiology

Abstract: The circadian clock is an evolutionarily acquired gene network that synchronizes physiological processes to adapt homeostasis to the succession of day and night. While most mammalian cells have a circadian clock, their synchronization at the body-level depends on a central pacemaker located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus that integrates light signals. However, peripheral organs are also synchronized by feeding cues that can uncoupled them from the central pacemaker. Nevertheless, the potenti… Show more

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“…The synthetic function of the liver makes it an essential modulator of microcirculation (through the synthesis of albumin) and hemostasis (through the synthesis of coagulation factors). The liver plays a crucial role in glucose/energy metabolism, and the hepatocytes' oscillatory clock gene expression modulates central circadian rhythms and behaviors (Delbès et al., 2023). The liver is an important systemic barrier and clears a variety of different endogenous (e.g., hormones) and exogenous compounds (e.g., xenobiotics, gut‐derived bacterial lipopolysaccharide endotoxins) with implications in the pathophysiology of diseases.…”
Section: The Liver Is Highly Central In the Physiological Network Hubmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The synthetic function of the liver makes it an essential modulator of microcirculation (through the synthesis of albumin) and hemostasis (through the synthesis of coagulation factors). The liver plays a crucial role in glucose/energy metabolism, and the hepatocytes' oscillatory clock gene expression modulates central circadian rhythms and behaviors (Delbès et al., 2023). The liver is an important systemic barrier and clears a variety of different endogenous (e.g., hormones) and exogenous compounds (e.g., xenobiotics, gut‐derived bacterial lipopolysaccharide endotoxins) with implications in the pathophysiology of diseases.…”
Section: The Liver Is Highly Central In the Physiological Network Hubmentioning
confidence: 99%