Delta sleep-inducing peptide and glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper: potential links between circadian mechanisms and obesity?
Gimble. J M JM; Ptitsyn. A A AA; Goh. B C BC; Hebert. T T; Yu. G G; Wu. X X; Zvonic. S S; Shi. X-M XM; Floyd. Z E ZE
Key Findings
- Core circadian clock genes are rhythmically expressed in adipose (fat) tissue in both mice and humans.
- The peptide DSIP/GILZ was identified as a potential molecular bridge linking sleep/circadian signals to fat metabolism.
- GILZ can steer stem cells toward becoming fat cells or bone cells, and its daily pattern can be reset by external cues such as light or feeding.
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway for biohackers is that timing of sleep‑related interventions (e.g., DSIP supplementation or sleep hygiene) might someday be used to modulate fat storage, but the evidence is still preliminary. No specific dosing or protocol is recommended yet; further research is needed before applying this to weight‑loss or performance strategies.
Summary
Researchers found that a protein called GILZ (also known as delta sleep‑inducing peptide or DSIP) shows daily rhythms in fat tissue and may connect our sleep‑wake cycles to how fat is stored or burned. While this is still early‑stage science, it hints that tweaking sleep‑related signals could influence weight and metabolism.
Abstract
As the obesity pandemic has accelerated, investigators have begun to explore alternative mechanisms linking circadian biology and sleep to adipose tissue metabolism and obesity. This manuscript reviews recent findings in murine and human models demonstrating the oscillatory expression of the mRNAs encoding the core circadian regulatory proteins in adipose tissue. Comparative transcriptomic analyses of circadian oscillating genes have been used to identify the 'delta sleep-inducing peptide immunoreactor', also known as 'glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ)', as a potential link in this chain. The GILZ gene has been found to differentially regulate stromal stem cell adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation in a reciprocal manner. In adipose and other metabolically active tissues, the circadian oscillation of GILZ expression is subject to entrainment by external stimuli. Together, these observations suggest that GILZ is an attractive candidate for future studies evaluating the role of circadian mechanisms in adipose tissue physiology and pathology.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
10.1111/j.1467-789x.2009.00661.x