Seasonal rhythms in photoperiod are a predictive cue used by many temperate-zone animals to time cycles of lipid accumulation. The neuroendocrine regulation of seasonal energy homeostasis and rheostasis are widely studied. However, the molecular pathways underlying tissue-specific adaptations remain poorly described. We conducted two experiments to examine long-term rheostatic changes in energy stability using the well-characterized photoperiodic response of the Japanese quail. In experiment 1, we exposed quails to photoperiodic transitions simulating the annual photic cycle and examined the morphology and fat deposition in liver, muscle, and adipose tissue. To identify changes in gene expression and molecular pathways during the vernal transition in lipid accumulation, we conducted transcriptomic analyses of adipose and liver tissues. Experiment 2 assessed whether the changes observed in Experiment 1 reflected constitutive levels or were due to time-of-day sampling. We identified increased expression of transcripts involved in adipocyte growth, such as Cysteine Rich Angiogenic Inducer 61 and Very Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor, and in obesity-linked disease resistance, such as Insulin-Like Growth Factor Binding Protein 2 and Apolipoprotein D, in anticipation of body mass gain. Under long photoperiods, hepatic transcripts involved in fatty acid (FA) synthesis (FA Synthase, FA Desaturase 2) were down-regulated. Parallel upregulation of hepatic FA Translocase and Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Kinase 4 expression suggests increased FA uptake and inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Our findings demonstrate tissue-specific biochemical and molecular changes that drive photoperiod-induced adipogenesis. These findings can be used to determine conserved pathways that enable animals to accumulate fat without developing metabolic diseases.
Read full abstract