Abstract
Background: Light input to the suprachiasmatic nucleus entrains circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior to the day-night cycle. Exposure to light at night in people is associated with cardiometabolic disease. Pre-clinical studies show that artificial light at night, including at very low levels, disrupts day-night rhythms in activity, feeding behavior, heart rate, and blood pressure dipping. Hypothesis: Dim light at night (dLAN) disrupts day-night rhythms in feeding behavior to blunt day-night rhythms in autonomic input to the heart and blood pressure dipping. Methods: Mice (n=5-6/sex) in thermoneutral housing were implanted with telemetry probes to record heart rate, blood pressure, and core body temperature. Autonomic input to the heart was assessed by measuring heart rate and subtracting the temperature-dependent changes in the heart rate after pharmacological inhibition of muscarinic and β-adrenergic receptor activation. Mice were housed in 12 h light: 12 h dark cycles (LD, 200 lux: 0 lux) with ad libitum access to food (LD-ALF), subjected to 12 h light: 12 h dLAN cycles (dLAN-ALF; 200 lux: 5 lux) for two weeks, and then feeding was time-restricted (not calorically restricted) to the dLAN cycle (dLAN-RF). Data were extracted from Ponemah and Clocklab, and statistical analysis was done using GraphPad PRISM software. Results: Compared to LD-ALF mice, dLAN-ALF mice showed reduced amplitudes in day-night activity, feeding, heart rate, and blood pressure rhythms, with males more affected than females (p<0.001). dLAN-ALF male and female mice had decreased amplitudes in the day-night rhythms in autonomic input to the heart. In addition, dLAN-ALF male mice had less blood pressure dipping. dLAN-RF normalized autonomic input to the heart and heart rate in male and female mice (p<0.05, p<0.01, respectively). dLAN-RF also improved blood pressure dipping in male mice (p<0.001). dLAN-RF did not normalize activity rhythms. Conclusion: dLAN disrupts day-night rhythms in activity, feeding, heart rate, and blood pressure dipping in mice, with males being more impacted. Time-restricted feeding to the dLAN cycle normalizes autonomic input to the heart and blood pressure dipping. These data suggest that time-restricted feeding counteracts the light-at-night-induced circadian disruption of cardiovascular function.
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