High-fat diet acutely affects circadian organisation and eating behavior.
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Abstract | 
   :  
              The organisation of timing in mammalian circadian clocks optimally coordinates behavior and physiology with daily environmental cycles. Chronic consumption of a high-fat diet alters circadian rhythms, but the acute effects on circadian organisation are unknown. To investigate the proximate effects of a high-fat diet on circadian physiology, we examined the phase relationship between central and peripheral clocks in mice fed a high-fat diet for 1 week. By 7 days, the phase of the liver rhythm was markedly advanced (by 5 h), whereas rhythms in other tissues were not affected. In addition, immediately upon consumption of a high-fat diet, the daily rhythm of eating behavior was altered. As the tissue rhythm of the suprachiasmatic nucleus was not affected by 1 week of high-fat diet consumption, the brain nuclei mediating the effect of a high-fat diet on eating behavior are likely to be downstream of the suprachiasmatic nucleus.  | 
        
| Year of Publication | 
   :  
              2013 
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| Journal | 
   :  
              The European journal of neuroscience 
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| Volume | 
   :  
              37 
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| Issue | 
   :  
              8 
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| Number of Pages | 
   :  
              1350-6 
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| ISSN Number | 
   :  
              0953-816X 
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| URL | 
   :  
              https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.12133 
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| DOI | 
   :  
              10.1111/ejn.12133 
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| Short Title | 
   :  
              Eur J Neurosci 
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