Astrocytic insulin receptor controls circadian behavior via dopamine signaling in a sexually dimorphic manner
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Nature
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Mammalian circadian clocks respond to feeding and light cues, adjusting internal rhythms with day/night cycles. Astrocytes serve as circadian timekeepers, driving daily physiological rhythms; however, it’s unknown how they ensure precise cycle-to-cycle rhythmicity. This is critical for understanding why mistimed or erratic feeding, as in shift work, disrupts circadian physiology- a condition linked to type 2 diabetes and obesity. Here, we show that astrocytic insulin signaling sets the free-running period of locomotor activity in female mice and food entrainment in male mice. Additionally, ablating the insulin receptor in hypothalamic astrocytes alters cyclic energy homeostasis differently in male and female mice. Remarkably, the mutants exhibit altered dopamine metabolism, and the pharmacological modulation of dopaminergic signaling partially restores distinct circadian traits in both male and female mutant mice. Our findings highlight the role of astrocytic insulin-dopaminergic signaling in conveying time-of-feeding or lighting cues to the astrocyte clock, thus governing circadian behavior in a sex-specific manner.
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González Vila, A., Luengo Mateos, M., Silveira Loureiro, M., Garrido-Gil, P., Ohinska, N., González-Domínguez, M., Labandeira-García, J. L., García-Cáceres, C., López, M., & Barca Mayo, O. (2023). Astrocytic insulin receptor controls circadian behavior via dopamine signaling in a sexually dimorphic fashion. "Nature Communications", 14, 8175
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https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-44039-8Sponsors
Xunta de Galicia, Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Ordenación Universitaria (O.B.M.: ED431F 2020/ 009 and ED431C 2023/28); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (O.B.M.: PID2019-109556RB-I00; PID2022-138436OB-I00); Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación co-funded by the FEDER Program of EU (M.L.: PID2021- 128145NB-I00); O.B.M. is supported with a Ramón y Cajal award (RYC2018‐026293‐I) from the Ministerio de Ciencia, e Innovación of Spain. C.G.C. is supported by funding from the European Research Council ERC (C.G.C.: STG grant AstroNeuroCrosstalk # 757393), the German Research Foundation DFG under Germany’s Excellence Strat- egy within the framework of the Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (EXC 2145 SyNergy—ID 390857198), and the Helmholtz Association— Initiative and Networking Fund. CiMUS is supported by the Xunta de Galicia (2016-2019, ED431G/05). CIBER de Fisiopatología de la Obesidad y Nutrición is an initiative of ISCIII. M.L.M. and M.S.L. are supported from the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades of Spain (PRE2020-093614 and FPU2018/00647).
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