Abstract

Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a key metabolic regulator that is induced by fasting and starvation, and its expression is thought to be regulated by the circadian clock in the liver. To evaluate the functional role of FGF21 in the circadian regulation of physiology and behavior, we examined the temporal expression profiles of Fgf21 and circadian clock genes in addition to behavioral activity rhythms under adlibitum feeding (ALF) and time-imposed restricted feeding (RF) in mice. Four hours of daily restricted feeding during the daytime induced over an 80-fold increase in feeding-dependent rhythmic Fgf21 mRNA expression in epididymal white adipose tissue (eWAT), although the expression levels were continuously increased 10-fold in the liver of wild-type (WT) mice. Refeeding subsequent to transient fasting revealed that refeeding but not fasting remarkably induces Fgf21 expression in eWAT, although fasting-induced hepatic Fgf21 expression is completely reversed by refeeding. The free-running period of locomotor activity rhythm under ALF and the food anticipatory activity (FAA) under RF remained intact in Fgf21 knockout (KO) mice, suggesting that FGF21 is dispensable for both the central clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and the food-entrainable oscillator that governs the FAA. Temporal expression profiles of circadian genes such as mPer2 and BMAL1 were essentially identical in both tissues between WT and Fgf21 KO mice under RF. The physiological role of the refeeding-induced adipose Fgf21 expression remains to be elucidated.

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