by Allison Elliott-Shannon
Vincent Cassone. Credit: Dana Rogers
When you eat could have as much impact on your health as what you eat. That's the conclusion reached by researchers in an ongoing series of papers and studies funded as part of a major grant from the National Institutes of Health.
Vincent Cassone, University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences professor and chair of the Department of Biology, has published more than 100 papers in leading academic journals on the internal timekeeping functions of the body.
"Biological rhythms are a fundamental property of all living things," said Cassone, who has extensively studied biological clocks in animal models and cites high rates of gastrointestinal illnesses and cancer that can be impacted by, among other things, eating patterns and digestion.
Cassone began working on body clocks and digestion as part of a collaboration with a gastroenterologist studying the role of body clocks in the digestive system. He is currently working with the support of $1 million grant from the National Institute on Aging, a division of the National Institutes of Health, to study how the gastrointestinal clock is affected by aging.
Scientists have known for some time that there is a localized brain clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). This neurobiological timekeeper sends out signals to the brain telling the body when to eat, rest, rebuild tissues and perform other key functions.
Cassone has noted that in addition to the SCN, there are circadian clocks embedded in tissues throughout the body. Regulated by genes, these clocks tell the various organs and tissues when to perform their functions that maintain the body. However, when the SCN and the peripheral body clocks come into conflict, the body is thrown into confusion.
This video is not supported by your browser at this time.
One way that the SCN and peripheral body clocks can be thrown out of sync is through off-schedule eating. A great deal of evidence underscores the idea that people who eat at unusual times—including night shift workers, international travelers, and others who are up and active at odd hours—have more digestive illnesses than those who eat primarily during daytime hours, when the motility of the gastrointestinal system is at its peak.
"The biological clock doesn't match our modern lifestyles," said Cassone, speaking of Americans' tendency to eat late, heavy meals over the protestations and natural rhythms and progression of their internal clocks.
People who eat large amounts of food at a time when their SCN believes they should be asleep and performing bodily processes associated with healing and restoration, rather than digestion, are more prone to suffer from an array of ailments including colitis, Crohn's disease, colon cancer and irritable bowel syndrome.
Even if the person is used to being up all night for their work or other lifestyle requirements, the clocks governing their body are not prepared to digest full meals at a time when the body believes it should be resting and restoring itself. High rates of gastrointestinal illnesses, for example, have been documented in populations such as night-shift nurses.
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© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network
by Allison Elliott-Shannon
Vincent Cassone. Credit: Dana Rogers
When you eat could have as much impact on your health as what you eat. That's the conclusion reached by researchers in an ongoing series of papers and studies funded as part of a major grant from the National Institutes of Health.
Vincent Cassone, University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences professor and chair of the Department of Biology, has published more than 100 papers in leading academic journals on the internal timekeeping functions of the body.
"Biological rhythms are a fundamental property of all living things," said Cassone, who has extensively studied biological clocks in animal models and cites high rates of gastrointestinal illnesses and cancer that can be impacted by, among other things, eating patterns and digestion.
Cassone began working on body clocks and digestion as part of a collaboration with a gastroenterologist studying the role of body clocks in the digestive system. He is currently working with the support of $1 million grant from the National Institute on Aging, a division of the National Institutes of Health, to study how the gastrointestinal clock is affected by aging.
Scientists have known for some time that there is a localized brain clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). This neurobiological timekeeper sends out signals to the brain telling the body when to eat, rest, rebuild tissues and perform other key functions.
Cassone has noted that in addition to the SCN, there are circadian clocks embedded in tissues throughout the body. Regulated by genes, these clocks tell the various organs and tissues when to perform their functions that maintain the body. However, when the SCN and the peripheral body clocks come into conflict, the body is thrown into confusion.
This video is not supported by your browser at this time.
One way that the SCN and peripheral body clocks can be thrown out of sync is through off-schedule eating. A great deal of evidence underscores the idea that people who eat at unusual times—including night shift workers, international travelers, and others who are up and active at odd hours—have more digestive illnesses than those who eat primarily during daytime hours, when the motility of the gastrointestinal system is at its peak.
"The biological clock doesn't match our modern lifestyles," said Cassone, speaking of Americans' tendency to eat late, heavy meals over the protestations and natural rhythms and progression of their internal clocks.
People who eat large amounts of food at a time when their SCN believes they should be asleep and performing bodily processes associated with healing and restoration, rather than digestion, are more prone to suffer from an array of ailments including colitis, Crohn's disease, colon cancer and irritable bowel syndrome.
Even if the person is used to being up all night for their work or other lifestyle requirements, the clocks governing their body are not prepared to digest full meals at a time when the body believes it should be resting and restoring itself. High rates of gastrointestinal illnesses, for example, have been documented in populations such as night-shift nurses.
Explore further: Second body clock discovered in the speckled sea louse
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Temperature rhythms keep body clocks in sync, researchers find
Oct 14, 2010
Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have found that fluctuations in internal body temperature regulate the body's circadian rhythm, the 24-hour cycle that controls metabolism, sleep and other bodily functions.
Body clock genes unravelled
May 03, 2012
International travellers, shift workers and even people suffering from obesity-related conditions stand to benefit from a key discovery about the functioning of the body's internal clock.
Second body clock discovered in the speckled sea louse
Sep 26, 2013
The diminutive speckled sea louse (Eurydice pulchra) boasts two body clocks, one for night and day and another for the ebb and flow of the tide, according to research published today.
Researchers discover new way to improve internal clock function
Aug 21, 2013
Overnight flights across the Atlantic, graveyard shifts, stress-induced insomnia are all prime culprits in keeping us from getting a good night's sleep. Thanks to new research from McGill University and Concordia ...
Key protein is linked to circadian clocks, helps regulate metabolism
Jun 18, 2013
Inside each of us is our own internal timing device. It drives everything from sleep cycles to metabolism, but the inner-workings of this so-called "circadian clock" are complex, and the molecular processes behind it have ...
Recommended for you
Lab mice breakthrough offers Alzheimer's hope
45 minutes ago
Scientists on Thursday said they had a drug that in mice helped prevent prion disease and may also work on Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and other brain disorders that share a similar mechanism.
Using stem cells to promote nerve regeneration
16 hours ago
Johns Hopkins researchers from the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery report that a type of stem cell found easily in fat cells and also in bone marrow promoted nerve regeneration in rats with paralyzing leg ...
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16 hours ago
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16 hours ago
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16 hours ago
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© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network

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