Research Article
Circadian PER1 controls daily fat absorption with the regulation of PER1-PKA on phosphorylation of bile acid synthetase

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlr.2023.100390Get rights and content
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Abstract

Several epidemiological studies suggest a correlation between eating time and obesity. Night eating syndrome characterized by a time-delayed eating pattern is positively associated with obesity in humans as well as in experimental animals. Here, we show that oil intake at night significantly makes more fat than that at day in wild-type mice, and circadian Period 1 (Per1) contributes to this day–night difference. Per1-knockout mice are protected from high-fat diet–induced obesity, which is accompanied by a reduction in the size of the bile acid pool, and the oral administration of bile acids restores fat absorption and accumulation. We identify that PER1 directly binds to the major hepatic enzymes involved in bile acid synthesis such as cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase and sterol 12alpha-hydroxylase. A biosynthesis rhythm of bile acids is accompanied by the activity and instability of bile acid synthases with PER1/PKA-mediated phosphorylation pathways. Both fasting and high fat stress enhance Per1 expression, increasing the fat absorption and accumulation. Our findings reveal that Per1 is an energy regulator and controls daily fat absorption and accumulation. Circadian Per1 controls daily fat absorption and accumulation, suggesting Per1 is a potential candidate of a key regulator in stress response and the relevant obesity risk.

Supplementary key words

Per1
bile acid and salts/biosynthesis
cholesterol 7-alpha hydroxylase
dietary fat
protein kinases
bile acid and salts

Abbreviations

BA
bile acid
CA
cholic acid
CYP7A1
cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase
CYP8B1
sterol 12α-hydroxylase
FA
fatty acid
FFA
free fatty acid
KRB
Kreb’s Ringer Buffer
ORO
oil red O

Cited by (0)

These authors contributed equally to this study.