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Rewiring of liver diurnal transcriptome rhythms by triiodothyronine (T 3 ) supplementation.

Leonardo Vinícius Monteiro de AssisLisbeth HarderJosé Thalles LacerdaRex ParsonsMeike KaehlerIngolf CascorbiInga NagelOliver RawashdehJens MittagHenrik Oster
Published in: eLife (2022)
Diurnal (i.e., 24 hr) physiological rhythms depend on transcriptional programs controlled by a set of circadian clock genes/proteins. Systemic factors like humoral and neuronal signals, oscillations in body temperature, and food intake align physiological circadian rhythms with external time. Thyroid hormones (THs) are major regulators of circadian clock target processes such as energy metabolism, but little is known about how fluctuations in TH levels affect the circadian coordination of tissue physiology. In this study, a high triiodothyronine (T 3 ) state was induced in mice by supplementing T 3 in the drinking water, which affected body temperature, and oxygen consumption in a time-of-day-dependent manner. A 24-hr transcriptome profiling of liver tissue identified 37 robustly and time independently T 3 -associated transcripts as potential TH state markers in the liver. Such genes participated in xenobiotic transport, lipid and xenobiotic metabolism. We also identified 10-15% of the liver transcriptome as rhythmic in control and T 3 groups, but only 4% of the liver transcriptome (1033 genes) were rhythmic across both conditions - amongst these, several core clock genes. In-depth rhythm analyses showed that most changes in transcript rhythms were related to mesor (50%), followed by amplitude (10%), and phase (10%). Gene set enrichment analysis revealed TH state-dependent reorganization of metabolic processes such as lipid and glucose metabolism. At high T 3 levels, we observed weakening or loss of rhythmicity for transcripts associated with glucose and fatty acid metabolism, suggesting increased hepatic energy turnover. In summary, we provide evidence that tonic changes in T 3 levels restructure the diurnal liver metabolic transcriptome independent of local molecular circadian clocks.
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