Timing of expression of the core clock gene <i>Bmal1</i> influences its effects on aging and survival

Guangrui Yang(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Lihong Chen(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Gregory R. Grant(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Georgios K. Paschos(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Wen‐Liang Song(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Erik S. Musiek(Hope Center for Neurological Disorders), Vivian Lee(Penn Presbyterian Medical Center), Sarah McLoughlin(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Tilo Großer(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), George Cotsarelis(University of Pennsylvania), Garret A. FitzGerald(Translational Therapeutics (United States))
Science Translational Medicine
February 3, 2016
Cited by 317Open Access
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Abstract

The absence of Bmal1, a core clock gene, results in a loss of circadian rhythms, an acceleration of aging, and a shortened life span in mice. To address the importance of circadian rhythms in the aging process, we generated conditional Bmal1 knockout mice that lacked the BMAL1 protein during adult life and found that wild-type circadian variations in wheel-running activity, heart rate, and blood pressure were abolished. Ocular abnormalities and brain astrogliosis were conserved irrespective of the timing of Bmal1 deletion. However, life span, fertility, body weight, blood glucose levels, and age-dependent arthropathy, which are altered in standard Bmal1 knockout mice, remained unaltered, whereas atherosclerosis and hair growth improved, in the conditional adult-life Bmal1 knockout mice, despite abolition of clock function. Hepatic RNA-Seq revealed that expression of oscillatory genes was dampened in the adult-life Bmal1 knockout mice, whereas overall gene expression was largely unchanged. Thus, many phenotypes in conventional Bmal1 knockout mice, hitherto attributed to disruption of circadian rhythms, reflect the loss of properties of BMAL1 that are independent of its role in the clock. These findings prompt reevaluation of the systemic consequences of disruption of the molecular clock.


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