Chronic stress is well known to affect metabolic regulation. However, molecular mechanisms interconnecting stress response systems and metabolic regulations have yet to be elucidated. Various physiological processes, including glucose/ lipid metabolism, are regulated by the circadian clock, and core clock gene dysregulation reportedly leads to metabolic disorders. Glucocorticoids, acting as end-effectors of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, entrain the circadian rhythms of peripheral organs, including the liver, by phase-shifting core clock gene expressions. Therefore, we examined whether chronic stress affects circadian expressions of core clock genes and metabolism-related genes in the liver using the chronic mild stress (CMS) procedure. In BALB/c mice, CMS elevated and phase-shifted serum corticosterone levels, indicating overactivation of the HPA axis. The rhythmic expressions of core clock genes, e.g., Clock, Npas2, Bmal1, Per1, and Cry1, were altered in the liver while being completely preserved in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nuculeus (SCN), suggesting that the SCN is not involved in alterations in hepatic core clock gene expressions. In addition, circadian patterns of glucose and lipid metabolism-related genes, e.g., peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (Ppar) ␣, Ppar␥-1, Ppar␥-coactivator-1␣, and phosphoenolepyruvate carboxykinase, were also disturbed by CMS. In contrast, in C57BL/6 mice, the same CMS procedure altered neither serum corticosterone levels nor rhythmic expressions of hepatic core clock genes and metabolismrelated genes. Thus, chronic stress can interfere with the circadian expressions of both core clock genes and metabolism-related genes in the liver possibly involving HPA axis overactivation. This mechanism might contribute to metabolic disorders in stressful modern societies. stress; liver clock; metabolic disorders; hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis VARIOUS BEHAVIORAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL processes, including feeding behavior and energy metabolism, exhibit circadian (i.e., 24-h) rhythmicity, which may play a role in maintaining functional homeostasis. These rhythms are regulated by the circadian clock system, which is composed of transcriptional/ translational feedback loops. Although the mammalian master pacemaker is located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the core clock machinery has been identified in almost all peripheral tissues, including the liver (41). In brief, each cell contains a set of core clock genes, such as Clock, Bmal1, Cry 1-2, Per 1-3, and nuclear receptors (Rev-erb␣, ROR). The CLOCK/BMAL1 heterodimer regulates the production of proteins such as PERs and CRYs, which in turn regulate the production of BMAL1 (44). Through these feedback loops, the expressions of core clock genes generate endogenous rhythms of numerous protein expressions, leading to rhythmic functioning of cells and tissues over an ϳ24-h period (12). The molecular clock has been demonstrated to modulate energy metabolism by controlling the expressions and activi...