Author:
Olsen Luke,Krishnan Jaya,Banks Charles,Hassan Huzaifa,Rohner Nicolas
Abstract
SummaryCircadian control of physiology and metabolism is pervasive throughout nature, with circadian disruption contributing to premature aging, neurodegenerative disease, and type 2 diabetes (Musiek et al. 2016; Panda, 2016). It has become increasingly clear that peripheral tissues, such as skeletal muscle, possess cell-autonomous clocks crucial for metabolic homeostasis (Gabriel et al. 2021). In fact, disruption of the skeletal muscle circadian rhythm results in insulin resistance, sarcomere disorganization, and muscle weakness in both vertebrates and non-vertebrates – indicating that maintenance of a functional muscle circadian rhythm provides an adaptive advantage. We and others have found that cavefish possess a disrupted central circadian rhythm and, interestingly, a skeletal muscle phenotype strikingly similar to circadian knock-out mutants; namely, muscle loss, muscle weakness, and insulin resistance (Olsen et al. 2022; Riddle et al. 2018; Mack et al. 2021). However, whether the cavefish muscle phenotype results from muscle-specific circadian disruption remains untested. To this point, we investigated genome-wide, circadian-regulated gene expression within the skeletal muscle of theAstyanax mexicanus– comprised of the river-dwelling surface fish and troglobitic cavefish – providing novel insights into the evolutionary consequence of circadian disruption on skeletal muscle physiology.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory