PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study reveals links between alcoholic liver disease and the circadian clock

2014-01-18
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Giles Duffield
Giles.E.Duffield.2@nd.edu
574-631-1834
University of Notre Dame
New study reveals links between alcoholic liver disease and the circadian clock Researchers from the University of Notre Dame and the Indiana University School of Medicine have revealed a putative role for the circadian clock in the liver in the development of alcohol-induced hepatic steatosis, or fatty liver disease.

Hepatic steatosis is the abnormal accumulation of fats in the cells of the liver, and is linked to disturbed control of fat metabolism. Alcohol-induced liver steatosis is produced by excessive alcohol consumption and is linked to hepatitis, or inflammation of the liver. It can be a precursor to an even more serious illness, liver cirrhosis, which includes scarring of the liver. Ten percent to 35 percent of chronic heavy drinkers develop alcoholic hepatitis, and it is the main cause of liver disease in Western countries.

The team, led by associate professors Giles Duffield, from Notre Dame's Department of Biological Sciences and Eck Institute for Global Health, and Suthat Liangpunsakul from the Indiana University School of Medicine's Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, is interested in the molecular genetic basis for the molecular clock and liver steatosis.

The study, using molecular biological approaches and long-term alcohol feeding of experimental mice, reveals that the development of liver steatosis produced by alcohol abuse is intertwined with disturbances of the normal operation of the 24-hour clock system located in the cells of the liver. Importantly, this change in the liver clock seems to occur independently from the master clock system located in the brain.

The circadian clock regulates 24-hour rhythms in biochemistry, physiology and behavior, and its normal operation and appropriate synchronization to the external world, especially the alternating cycle of day and night, is critical to maintaining a normal healthy state. Disturbances of the clock have been linked to mental health disorders, to metabolic disease including obesity and diabetes, and to the development of cancer.

The liver plays many roles in the body, and includes control of metabolism, storage and release of energy molecules, and detoxification.

"Liver function changes daily in a rhythmic manner and is coordinated with cycles of feeding-fasting and to the energy demands of the body, such as activity and rest," Duffield said. "These daily rhythms are regulated by the circadian clock within those liver cells, and disturbances to the molecular clock mechanism or poor temporal coordination of the clock with the timing of eating, or the sleep-wake and rest-activity cycle, can lead to illness."

The study suggests that either the circadian clock is important in the actual development of the liver disease or that the development of steatosis disrupts the normal pattern of the clock mechanism. The researchers' findings also offer novel insights into how the disease might be manipulated for clinical purposes.

Interestingly, the mechanism by which chronic alcohol intake is thought to alter the control of fat metabolism in the liver is also a shared signal to the circadian clock mechanism, this being the ratio of production of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, or NADH, to NAD+. The authors suggest that this may be a key to the shared disturbance to the two biological mechanisms of lipid metabolism and the circadian clock.

The study, Zhou et al., was published this week in the journal Nature: Scientific Reports.

### The work was a collaborative effort between the Duffield and Liangpunsakul laboratories, involving lead author and doctoral candidate Peng Zhou, undergraduate student Cameron Pywell and research technician Roth Ross. The work was supported from grants from the National Institutes of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, the American Heart Association, the Veterans Association and the U.S. Department of Defense.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

What comforts targets of prejudice the most

2014-01-18
What comforts targets of prejudice the most Rare in history are moments like the 1960s civil rights movement, in which members of a majority group vocally support minority groups in their fight against prejudice. New research not ...

The bigger the tree, the faster it grows

2014-01-18
The bigger the tree, the faster it grows Older trees remove bigger share of carbon from atmosphere Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 15, 2013 -- Contrary to long-held misconceptions, trees never stop growing during their lifespans, a new study has found. In fact, as they ...

Poison-breathing bacteria may be boon to industry, environment

2014-01-18
Poison-breathing bacteria may be boon to industry, environment Athens, Ga. – Buried deep in the mud along the banks of a remote salt lake near Yosemite National Park are colonies of bacteria with an unusual property: they breathe a toxic metal to survive. Researchers ...

TRMM satellite calculates System 91W's deadly Philippine flooding

2014-01-18
TRMM satellite calculates System 91W's deadly Philippine flooding People in the southern Philippines are used to heavy rainfall this time of the year but rainfall totals have recently been exceptionally high. A tropical low known as System 91W, located northeast ...

Researchers collaborate to reduce effects of the aging eye

2014-01-18
Researchers collaborate to reduce effects of the aging eye Findings are published in special issue of IOVS Rockville, Md. — Aging gracefully may not be an option for the 40 million people worldwide who are blind or have significant ...

Highly efficient broadband terahertz radiation from metamaterials

2014-01-18
Highly efficient broadband terahertz radiation from metamaterials Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory have demonstrated broadband terahertz (THz) wave generation using metamaterials. The discovery may help develop noninvasive imaging ...

Tiny swimming bio-bots boldly go where no bot has swum before

2014-01-18
Tiny swimming bio-bots boldly go where no bot has swum before CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The alien world of aquatic micro-organisms just got new residents: synthetic self-propelled swimming bio-bots. A team of engineers has developed a class of tiny ...

Drinking and driving: Unsafe at any level

2014-01-17
Drinking and driving: Unsafe at any level Very low blood alcohol content associated with causing car crashes Even "minimally buzzed" drivers are more often to blame for fatal car crashes than the sober drivers they collide with, reports a University of ...

Natural 3-D counterpart to graphene discovered

2014-01-17
Natural 3-D counterpart to graphene discovered Researchers at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source find new form of quantum matter The discovery of what is essentially a 3D version of graphene – the 2D sheets of carbon through which electrons race at ...

Fighting flies

2014-01-17
Fighting flies Caltech biologists identify sex-specific brain cells in male flies that promote aggression When one encounters a group of fruit flies invading their kitchen, it probably appears as if the whole group is vying for a sweet treat. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tan to conduct investigation of ferroelectric oxides as heterogeneous photocatalysts for ethane dehydrogenation

Sun to study software vulnerability detection & remediation

Study uncovers alarming anxiety rates among autistic college students

ETSU researchers discover 5-million-year-old deer fossils 

A fresh, multidimensional diagnosis for COPD identifies at-risk patients previously missed

Rice geoscientist honored with Geological Society of America’s Woollard Award

Historically redlined areas face disparities in emergency medical access and serious consequences for patients, new study finds

Pew awards 22 researchers biomedical science grants

5 Pew-Stewart scholars selected to pursue pioneering cancer research

Pew supports 10 Latin American fellows pursuing scientific advances

Portable spectroscopy enables detection of vaginal microbes

Ultrafast untethered levitation device utilized squeeze film for omni-directional transport

Cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts

Clarifying medical images using next-level pixel-particle analogy

What exactly is Long COVID? New UCLA research shows the answer depends on whom you ask

Work impairment and financial outcomes among adults with vs without long COVID

Hospital financial health and provision of obstetric and neonatal intensive care unit services

Studying terrestrial rocks to prepare techniques for Mars

Tiny ants crack the secret to perfect teamwork

Scientists find a microbial molecule that restores liver and gut health

Regulation of the temperature stability in ordered olivine microwave dielectric ceramics with low-loss for dielectric resonant antenna

Core-cladding-like phosphor ceramics wafer: a path to ultra-high luminance

Exercise may slow epigenetic aging

RSNA AI challenge models can independently interpret mammograms

Embargoed study: Breaking the link between alcohol use and pancreatic cancer

Why common blood pressure readings may be misleading – and how to fix them

Neural navigation: FAU engineers, sensing institute map brain’s blood flow

“Skin in a syringe” a step towards a new way to heal burns

BTI, Meiogenix and FFAR announce $2 million breakthrough tomato genetics collaboration

Better calibration for cuff-based blood pressure readings

[Press-News.org] New study reveals links between alcoholic liver disease and the circadian clock