Disruption of the clock components CLOCK and BMAL1 leads to hypoinsulinaemia and diabetes

Clocking on to diabetes During periods of feeding, pancreatic islets secrete insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis — a rhythmic process that is disturbed in people with diabetes. Experiments in mice now show that the pancreatic islets contain their own biological clock, which orchestrates insulin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2010-07, Vol.466 (7306), p.627-631
Hauptverfasser: Marcheva, Biliana, Ramsey, Kathryn Moynihan, Buhr, Ethan D., Kobayashi, Yumiko, Su, Hong, Ko, Caroline H., Ivanova, Ganka, Omura, Chiaki, Mo, Shelley, Vitaterna, Martha H., Lopez, James P., Philipson, Louis H., Bradfield, Christopher A., Crosby, Seth D., JeBailey, Lellean, Wang, Xiaozhong, Takahashi, Joseph S., Bass, Joseph
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Zusammenfassung:Clocking on to diabetes During periods of feeding, pancreatic islets secrete insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis — a rhythmic process that is disturbed in people with diabetes. Experiments in mice now show that the pancreatic islets contain their own biological clock, which orchestrates insulin secretion during the sleep–wake cycle. The transcription factors CLOCK and BMAL1 are vital for this process, and mice with defective copies of the genes Clock and Bmal1 develop hypoinsulinaemia and diabetes. By demonstrating that a local tissue clock integrates circadian and metabolic signals in pancreatic β-cells, this work suggests that circadian analyses are crucial for deeper understanding of metabolic phenotypes, as well as for the treatment of metabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes. Circadian rhythms control many physiological functions. During periods of feeding, pancreatic islets secrete insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis — a rhythmic process that is disturbed in people with diabetes. These authors show that pancreatic islets contain their own clock: they have self-sustained circadian oscillations of CLOCK and BMAL1 genes and proteins, which are vital for the regulation of circadian rhythms. Without this clock, a cascade of cellular failure and pathology initiates the onset of diabetes mellitus. The molecular clock maintains energy constancy by producing circadian oscillations of rate-limiting enzymes involved in tissue metabolism across the day and night 1 , 2 , 3 . During periods of feeding, pancreatic islets secrete insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis, and although rhythmic control of insulin release is recognized to be dysregulated in humans with diabetes 4 , it is not known how the circadian clock may affect this process. Here we show that pancreatic islets possess self-sustained circadian gene and protein oscillations of the transcription factors CLOCK and BMAL1. The phase of oscillation of islet genes involved in growth, glucose metabolism and insulin signalling is delayed in circadian mutant mice, and both Clock 5 , 6 and Bmal1 7 (also called Arntl ) mutants show impaired glucose tolerance, reduced insulin secretion and defects in size and proliferation of pancreatic islets that worsen with age. Clock disruption leads to transcriptome-wide alterations in the expression of islet genes involved in growth, survival and synaptic vesicle assembly. Notably, conditional ablation of the pancreatic clock causes diabetes mellitus due to defect
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/nature09253