For Patients & Visitors For Our Community For Healthcare Professionals For Our Employees For Business Partners Home


Services
Health Information
Donate / Volunteer
Our Hospitals & Clinics
Career Opportunities
About Us
Quality & Safety
Schools & Education

For Women
For Seniors
For Men
For Children


Home    Health Information

Health News - News

Back to Health Library   Print This Page Print    Email to a Friend Email

Insulin-Linked Genes Tied to Body's Internal Clock

Discovery could shed light on conditions related to sleep-wake cycle

THURSDAY, Sept. 17 (HealthDay News) -- Genes that regulate insulin in the body also play a role in the timing of the body's sleep-wake cycle, researchers say, and this finding that could potentially lead to treatments for disorders that arise when circadian rhythms are disrupted.

The insulin-control system, which governs how the body processes sugar, may also reset our internal clock, according to the study published online Sept. 17 in Cell.

"People knew that the clock regulates many different processes, but what they didn't realize was that when you tweak those processes, it feeds back and alters the clock," study co-author Steve Kay, dean of the Division of Biological Sciences at the University of California San Diego, said in a university news release.

"What came out very strongly was this close relationship between circadian regulation and insulin signaling," Kay explained. "There's a reciprocal relationship between circadian dysfunction and metabolic dysfunction."

According to Kay, mice with malfunctioning internal clocks get fat and develop diabetes. Chronic jetlag may cause similar problems in people, he noted.

"Understanding this close relationship between circadian regulation and metabolic homeostasis should provide novel ways of identifying new therapies for metabolic disease," Kay said.

More information

Learn more about the body clock from Penn State.


SOURCE: University of California San Diego, news release, Sept. 17, 2009

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


Print Friendly PagePrint Friendly Page

CoxHealth, Springfield, Missouri | (417) 269-3000
Copyright © 2007 CoxHealth. All rights reserved.

Home  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us  |  The Joint Commission  |  Disclaimer/Privacy Practices  |  Map & Directions  |  Privacy & Breach Alerts