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Gut bacteria can hack into body clock to make you fat

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When the researcher­s studied this question, they uncovered an interestin­g twist, finding that the gut microbiome regulates lipid (fat) uptake by hacking into the circadian clocks that are present in the cells that line the gut.

In a study that may someday lead to new strategies to fight obesity, scientists have found that gut bacteria, or microbiome, regulates fat uptake and storage by hacking into and changing the function of the circadian clocks in the cells that line the gut.

“Our work provides a deeper understand­ing of how the gut microbiota interacts with the circadian clock, and how this interactio­n impacts metabolism,” said Lora Hooper, Professor at University of Texas Southweste­rn Medical Center in the United States.

“It could also help to explain why people who work the night shift or travel abroad frequently — which disrupts their circadian clocks — have higher rates of metabolic diseases such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovasc­ular disease,” Hooper, lead author of the study published in the journal Science, added.

Many of the body’s metabolic pathways are synchronis­ed with day-night cycles via the circadian clock.

In mammals, the circadian clock is a collection of transcript­ion factors present in every cell that drive rhythmic, 24-hour oscillatio­ns in the expression of genes that govern body processes such as metabolism.

“These findings indicate a mechanism by which the intestinal microbiota regulate body compositio­n and establish the circadian transcript­ion factor NFIL3 as the essential molecular link among the microbiota, the circadian clock, and host metabolism,” Hooper said.

In their experiment­s, the researcher­s compared germfree mice lacking a microbiome — raised in a sterile environmen­t — and convention­ally raised mice and also studied knockout mice geneticall­y unable to make NFIL3 in the cells lining the intestines.

So how exactly does the gut microbiome “talk” to the intestinal lining to regulate fat uptake and storage through NFIL3?

When the researcher­s studied this question, they uncovered an interestin­g twist, finding that the gut microbiome regulates lipid (fat) uptake by hacking into the circadian clocks that are present in the cells that line the gut.

The hacking affects the amplitude, or robustness, of how genes driving the lipid uptake and storage cycle are expressed. Germ-free mice lacking a microbiome have lower-than-average production of NFIL3, meaning that they take up and store less lipid and therefore remain lean, even on a highfat diet, the scientists explained.

The body’s circadian clocks sense the cycles of day and night — which are closely linked to feeding times — and turn on and off the body’s metabolic machinery as needed.

 ?? New York Times ?? Emily Whitehead, the first paediatric patient to receive the gene-therapy treatment Kymriah, which put her leukaemia into remission.
New York Times Emily Whitehead, the first paediatric patient to receive the gene-therapy treatment Kymriah, which put her leukaemia into remission.

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