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Most aspects of physiology and behaviour fluctuate every 24 h in mammals. These circadian rhythms are orchestrated by an autonomous central clock located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei that coordinates the timing of cellular clocks in tissues throughout the body. The critical role of this circadian system is emphasized by increasing evidence associating disruption of circadian rhythms with diverse pathologies. Accordingly, mounting evidence suggests a bidirectional relationship where disruption of rhythms by circadian misalignment may contribute to liver diseases while liver diseases alter the central clock and circadian rhythms in other tissues. Therefore, liver pathophysiology may broadly impact the circadian system and may provide a mechanistic framework for understanding and targeting metabolic diseases and adjust metabolic setpoints.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 9, 2026
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Vogel, Christine; Balázsi, Gábor; Löwer, Alexander; Jiang, Caifu; Schmid, Amy K.; Sommer, Morten; Yang, Laurence; Münch, Christian; Wang, Andrew; Israni-Winger, Kavita; et al (, Cell Systems)
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