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Review
Lifelong Circadian and Epigenetic Drifts in Metabolic Syndrome
Catherine Gallou-Kabani, Alexandre Vigé and Claudine Junien
volume 2 | issue 3
july/august/september 2007Subscribe to this journal for $79/year
Epigenetic misprogramming during development is widely thought to have a persistent effect on the health of the offspring and may even be transmitted to the next generation. However, little is known about the stochastically, genetically and environmentally triggered epimutations occurring during an individuals lifetime. They may result from replication-dependent, replication-independent or DNA repair events. The rhythmic, circadian induction of a substantial proportion of genes, by a network of clock genes - one of which is a histone acetyl transferase - nuclear receptors and transcription factors is controlled by chromatin remodeling. The associated circadian epigenetic patterns must be transient, sensitive to environmental cues and reversible. Links have been found between circadian rhythms and major components of energy homeostasis, thermogenesis and hunger-satiety, rest-activity rhythms, and the sleep-wake cycle. Thus poorly adapted behavior or lifestyle and desynchronized cues may disturb the modulation of gene expression. This functional asynchrony may ultimately lead to persistence of aberrant and unphased locking or leakage of gene expression and inadapted responses in the body as a whole.
Authors
Catherine Gallou-Kabani
Paris-Descartes Universit; Necker Hospital for Sick Children; Paris France
Alexandre Vigé
Paris-Descartes Universit; Necker Hospital for Sick Children; Paris France
Claudine Junien
Paris-Descartes Universit; Necker Hospital for Sick Children; Paris France





