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Associate Professor Frederic Gachon
Associate Professor

Frederic Gachon

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Overview

Background

Frédéric Gachon received his PhD in 2001 from the University of Montpellier (France). Between 2001 and 2006, he performed his post-doctoral training with Prof. Ueli Schibler at the department of Molecular Biology of the University of Geneva (Switzerland), where he started to work on the regulation of physiology by the circadian clock. In 2006, he worked at the Institute of Human Genetic in Montpellier (France) as a junior group leader before continued his career in Switzerland as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pharmacology of the University of Lausanne (2009-2012) and as a group leader at the Nestlé Institute of Health Sciences, Lausanne (2012-2018). He finally joined the Institute of Molecular Bioscience of the University of Queensland as an Associate Professor in 2019. During all these years, research of the Gachon group focussed on the understanding of the role of feeding and circadian rhythms on mouse and human physiology, contributing to the fundamental basis for chronopharmacology and chrononutrition.

Availability

Associate Professor Frederic Gachon is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Postgraduate Diploma, Université de la Méditerranée, Aix- Marseille II
  • Postgraduate Diploma, École Nationale Supérieure de Chimie de Montpellier
  • Postgraduate Diploma, Montpellier 2 University
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Montpellier 2 University

Research interests

  • Physiology of circadian rhythms

    Circadian clocks have been conserved throughout the evolution, allowing the adaptation of the physiology to the time of day in an anticipatory way. As a demonstration of their crucial role, perturbation of the circadian clock leads to numerous pathologies including obesity, type 2 diabetes and cancer. Our goal is to determine how the circadian clock regulates mammalian physiology and understand how the perturbation of the circadian clock leads to pathologies. We use a wide variety of techniques, including animal biology, molecular biology, biochemistry, genomics, proteomics and bioinformatic analysis of the data to make conclusions at the biological system level.

Research impacts

Our research group has made many significant contributions to the field. The first of these was the description of the control of xenobiotic detoxification by the circadian clock, constituting a breakthrough in the field of chronopharmacology. Other contributions are related to the characterisation of the mechanisms of transcriptional regulation by the circadian clock, which led to the first description of rhythmic mRNA translation that is regulated by circadian and feeding rhythms. This rhythmic translation controls ribosome biogenesis that contributes to liver size fluctuations. Because mRNA expression is often insufficient to predict gene expression, we invested a lot of effort in characterizing the impact of the circadian clock on protein accumulation. This led to the first high scale proteomic analyses of mouse liver and its nuclear compartment, establishing the regulation of the rhythmic protein abundance occurs primarily at the post-translational level. My work showed that less than 50% of the rhythmic proteins are encoded by rhythmic mRNA, while protein transport and secretion play a central role in the regulation proteins levels. We have also have recently studied the impact of the microbiome on rhythmic physiology. This work showed that the microbiome mainly impacts sexual maturation and growth hormone secretion, affecting gene expression and metabolism in digestive tissues in a sex-specific manner. This observation can explain the previously described phenotypes of germ-free mice including resistance to obesity and cancer. On top of this basic research, our research has also examined the impact of the circadian clock on the metabolism of glucose, lipids and vitamins, in particular in the liver, kidney and pancreas. Human studies corroborated my animal research and provided a basis for translation of our research, in particular in the domain of chrononutrition.

Works

Search Professor Frederic Gachon’s works on UQ eSpace

71 works between 1998 and 2024

21 - 40 of 71 works

2020

Journal Article

Robust landscapes of ribosome dwell times and aminoacyl-tRNAs in response to nutrient stress in liver

Gobet, Cédric, Weger, Benjamin Dieter, Marquis, Julien, Martin, Eva, Neelagandan, Nagammal, Gachon, Frédéric and Naef, Felix (2020). Robust landscapes of ribosome dwell times and aminoacyl-tRNAs in response to nutrient stress in liver. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117 (17), 9630-9641. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1918145117

Robust landscapes of ribosome dwell times and aminoacyl-tRNAs in response to nutrient stress in liver

2019

Journal Article

At the intersection of microbiota and circadian clock: are sexual dimorphism and growth hormones the missing link to pathology? Circadian clock and microbiota: potential egffect on growth hormone and sexual development

Weger, Benjamin D., Rawashdeh, Oliver and Gachon, Frédéric (2019). At the intersection of microbiota and circadian clock: are sexual dimorphism and growth hormones the missing link to pathology? Circadian clock and microbiota: potential egffect on growth hormone and sexual development. BioEssays, 41 (9) 1900059, e1900059. doi: 10.1002/bies.201900059

At the intersection of microbiota and circadian clock: are sexual dimorphism and growth hormones the missing link to pathology? Circadian clock and microbiota: potential egffect on growth hormone and sexual development

2019

Journal Article

Medicine in the Fourth Dimension

Cederroth, Christopher R., Albrecht, Urs, Bass, Joseph, Brown, Steven A., Dyhrfjeld-Johnsen, J., Gachon, Frederic, Green, Carla B., Hastings, Michael H., Helfrich-Förster, Charlotte, Hogenesch, John B., Lévi, Francis, Loudon, Andrew, Lundkvist, Gabriella B., Meijer, Johanna H., Rosbash, Michael, Takahashi, Joseph S., Young, Michael and Canlon, Barbara (2019). Medicine in the Fourth Dimension. Cell Metabolism, 30 (2), 238-250. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2019.06.019

Medicine in the Fourth Dimension

2019

Journal Article

Circadian regulation of cochlear sensitivity to noise by circulating glucocorticoids

Cederroth, Christopher R., Park, Jung-sub, Basinou, Vasiliki, Weger, Benjamin D., Tserga, Evangelia, Sarlus, Heela, Magnusson, Anna K., Kadri, Nadir, Gachon, Frédéric and Canlon, Barbara (2019). Circadian regulation of cochlear sensitivity to noise by circulating glucocorticoids. Current Biology, 29 (15), 2477-2487.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.057

Circadian regulation of cochlear sensitivity to noise by circulating glucocorticoids

2019

Journal Article

Microbiota and the clock: sexual dimorphism matters!

Weger, Benjamin D and Gachon, Frédéric (2019). Microbiota and the clock: sexual dimorphism matters!. Aging, 11 (12), 3893-3894. doi: 10.18632/aging.102051

Microbiota and the clock: sexual dimorphism matters!

2019

Journal Article

Protéomique circadienne

Gachon, Frédéric (2019). Protéomique circadienne. Biologie aujourd'hui, 212 (3-4), 55-59. doi: 10.1051/jbio/2018025

Protéomique circadienne

2019

Journal Article

The mouse microbiome is required for sex-specific diurnal rhythms of gene expression and metabolism

Weger, Benjamin D, Gobet, Cédric, Yeung, Jake, Martin, Eva, Jimenez, Sonia, Betrisey, Bertrand, Foata, Francis, Berger, Bernard, Balvay, Aurélie, Foussier, Anne, Charpagne, Aline, Boizet-Bonhoure, Brigitte, Chou, Chieh Jason, Naef, Felix and Gachon, Frédéric (2019). The mouse microbiome is required for sex-specific diurnal rhythms of gene expression and metabolism. Cell Metabolism, 29 (2), 362-382. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2018.09.023

The mouse microbiome is required for sex-specific diurnal rhythms of gene expression and metabolism

2018

Journal Article

Chronotype: implications for epidemiologic studies on chrono-nutrition and cardiometabolic health

Almoosawi, Suzana, Vingeliene, Snieguole, Gachon, Frederic, Voortman, Trudy, Palla, Luigi, Johnston, Jonathan D, Van Dam, Rob Martinus, Darimont, Christian and Karagounis, Leonidas G (2018). Chronotype: implications for epidemiologic studies on chrono-nutrition and cardiometabolic health. Advances in Nutrition , 10 (1), 30-42. doi: 10.1093/advances/nmy070

Chronotype: implications for epidemiologic studies on chrono-nutrition and cardiometabolic health

2018

Journal Article

Cross-regulatory circuits linking inflammation, high-fat diet, and the circadian clock

Gachon, Frederic, Yeung, Jake and Naef, Felix (2018). Cross-regulatory circuits linking inflammation, high-fat diet, and the circadian clock. Genes & Development, 32 (21-22), 1359-1360. doi: 10.1101/gad.320911.118

Cross-regulatory circuits linking inflammation, high-fat diet, and the circadian clock

2018

Journal Article

Transcriptomic analyses reveal rhythmic and CLOCK-driven pathways in human skeletal muscle

Perrin, Laurent, Loizides-Mangold, Ursula, Chanon, Stephanie, Gobet, Cedric, Hulo, Nicolas, Isenegger, Laura, Weger, Benjamin D., Migliavacca, Eugenia, Charpagne, Aline, Betts, James A., Walhin, Jean-Philippe, Templeman, Lain, Stokes, Keith, Thompson, Dylan, Tsintzas, Kostas, Robert, Maud, Howald, Cedric, Riezman, Howard, Feige, Jerome N., Karagounis, Leonidas G., Johnston, Jonathan D., Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T., Gachon, Frederic, Lefai, Etienne and Dibner, Charna (2018). Transcriptomic analyses reveal rhythmic and CLOCK-driven pathways in human skeletal muscle. eLife, 7 e34114. doi: 10.7554/eLife.34114

Transcriptomic analyses reveal rhythmic and CLOCK-driven pathways in human skeletal muscle

2018

Journal Article

Clock-dependent chromatin topology modulates circadian transcription and behavior

Mermet, Jérôme, Yeung, Jake, Hurni, Clémence, Mauvoisin, Daniel, Gustafson, Kyle, Jouffe, Céline, Nicolas, Damien, Emmenegger, Yann, Gobet, Cédric, Franken, Paul, Gachon, Frédéric and Naef, Félix (2018). Clock-dependent chromatin topology modulates circadian transcription and behavior. Genes & Development, 32 (5-6), 347-358. doi: 10.1101/gad.312397.118

Clock-dependent chromatin topology modulates circadian transcription and behavior

2017

Journal Article

Transcription factor activity rhythms and tissue-specific chromatin interactions explain circadian gene expression across organs

Yeung, Jake, Mermet, Jérôme, Jouffe, Céline, Marquis, Julien, Charpagne, Aline, Gachon, Frédéric and Naef, Felix (2017). Transcription factor activity rhythms and tissue-specific chromatin interactions explain circadian gene expression across organs. Genome Research, 28 (2), 182-191. doi: 10.1101/gr.222430.117

Transcription factor activity rhythms and tissue-specific chromatin interactions explain circadian gene expression across organs

2017

Journal Article

Diurnal liver mass is associated with ribosome biogenesis

Sinturel, Flore and Gachon, Frederic (2017). Diurnal liver mass is associated with ribosome biogenesis. Oncotarget, 8 (57), 96476-96477. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.22255

Diurnal liver mass is associated with ribosome biogenesis

2017

Journal Article

Lipidomics reveals diurnal lipid oscillations in human skeletal muscle persisting in cellular myotubes cultured in vitro

Loizides-Mangold, Ursula, Perrin, Laurent, Vandereycken, Bart, Betts, James A., Walhin, Jean-Philippe, Templeman, Iain, Chanon, Stéphanie, Weger, Benjamin D., Durand, Christine, Robert, Maud, Paz Montoya, Jonathan, Moniatte, Marc, Karagounis, Leonidas G., Johnston, Jonathan D., Gachon, Frédéric, Lefai, Etienne, Riezman, Howard and Dibner, Charna (2017). Lipidomics reveals diurnal lipid oscillations in human skeletal muscle persisting in cellular myotubes cultured in vitro. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 114 (41), E8565-E8574. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1705821114

Lipidomics reveals diurnal lipid oscillations in human skeletal muscle persisting in cellular myotubes cultured in vitro

2017

Journal Article

Guidelines for genome-scale analysis of biological rhythms

Hughes, Michael E., Abruzzi, Katherine C., Allada, Ravi, Anafi, Ron, Arpat, Alaaddin Bulak, Asher, Gad, Baldi, Pierre, de Bekker, Charissa, Bell-Pedersen, Deborah, Blau, Justin, Brown, Steve, Ceriani, M. Fernanda, Chen, Zheng, Chiu, Joanna C., Cox, Juergen, Crowell, Alexander M., DeBruyne, Jason P., Dijk, Derk-Jan, DiTacchio, Luciano, Doyle, Francis J., Duffield, Giles E., Dunlap, Jay C., Eckel-Mahan, Kristin, Esser, Karyn A., FitzGerald, Garret A., Forger, Daniel B., Francey, Lauren J., Fu, Ying-Hui, Gachon, Frédéric ... Hogenesch, John B. (2017). Guidelines for genome-scale analysis of biological rhythms. Journal of Biological Rhythms, 32 (5), 380-393. doi: 10.1177/0748730417728663

Guidelines for genome-scale analysis of biological rhythms

2017

Journal Article

The genomic landscape of human cellular circadian variation points to a novel role for the signalosome

Gaspar, Ludmila, Howald, Cedric, Popadin, Konstantin, Maier, Bert, Mauvoisin, Daniel, Moriggi, Ermanno, Gutierrez-Arcelus, Maria, Falconnet, Emilie, Borel, Christelle, Kunz, Dieter, Kramer, Achim, Gachon, Frederic, Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T., Antonarakis, Stylianos E. and Brown, Steven A. (2017). The genomic landscape of human cellular circadian variation points to a novel role for the signalosome. Elife, 6 e24994. doi: 10.7554/eLife.24994

The genomic landscape of human cellular circadian variation points to a novel role for the signalosome

2017

Journal Article

Circadian and feeding rhythms orchestrate the diurnal liver acetylome

Mauvoisin, Daniel, Atger, Florian, Dayon, Loic, Galindo, Antonio Nunez, Wang, Jingkui, Martin, Eva, Da Silva, Laetitia, Montoliu, Ivan, Collino, Sebastiano, Martin, Francois-Pierre, Ratajczak, Joanna, Canto, Carles, Kussmann, Martin, Naef, Felix and Gachon, Frederic (2017). Circadian and feeding rhythms orchestrate the diurnal liver acetylome. Cell Reports, 20 (7), 1729-1743. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.07.065

Circadian and feeding rhythms orchestrate the diurnal liver acetylome

2017

Journal Article

Mise en évidence de la physiologie rythmique du foie par protéomique nucléaire

Mauvoisin, Daniel and Gachon, Frederic (2017). Mise en évidence de la physiologie rythmique du foie par protéomique nucléaire. Medecine Sciences, 33 (6-7), 573-576. doi: 10.1051/medsci/20173306005

Mise en évidence de la physiologie rythmique du foie par protéomique nucléaire

2017

Journal Article

Diurnal oscillations in liver mass and cell size accompany ribosome assembly cycles

Sinturel, Flore, Gerber, Alan, Mauvoisin, Daniel, Wang, Jingkui, Gatfield, David, Stubblefield, Jeremy J., Green, Carla B., Gachon, Frederic and Schibler, Ueli (2017). Diurnal oscillations in liver mass and cell size accompany ribosome assembly cycles. Cell, 169 (4), 651-663. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.04.015

Diurnal oscillations in liver mass and cell size accompany ribosome assembly cycles

2017

Journal Article

Glucose homeostasis: regulation by peripheral circadian clocks in rodents and humans

Gachon, Frederic, Loizides-Mangold, Ursula, Petrenko, Volodymyr and Dibner, Charna (2017). Glucose homeostasis: regulation by peripheral circadian clocks in rodents and humans. Endocrinology, 158 (5), 1074-1084. doi: 10.1210/en.2017-00218

Glucose homeostasis: regulation by peripheral circadian clocks in rodents and humans

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Frederic Gachon is:
Available for supervision

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Available projects

  • Specific role of the circadian clocks in the different liver cell types and how they interact

    The goal of this project is to define the specific role of the circadian clock in the different cell types of the liver (hepatocytes, stellate cells, endothelial cells...) and how the perturbation of these cell-specific circadian clock is involved in liver pathologies. This project will involve genetically modified animal models, RNA-sequencing, protein analysis and evaluation of metabolic parameters.

  • Regulation of liver protein secretion and its regulation by circadian and feeding rhythms

    While most of blood proteins are secreted by the liver, how they are secreted is still not clear, as well as the regulation of this secretion. Our previous experiments showed that liver protein secretion is rhythmic and regulated by feeding rhythms in both mouse and human. Using newly generated animal model and experiments in cultured cells, this project will decipher the mechanisms involved and the consequences of the perturbation of this rhythmic secretion on animal physiology.

  • Improving the recovery of ICU patients through the preservation of their circadian physiology

    The ICU of the Future project is a TPCH Critical Care Research Group project, employing a collaborative multi-disciplinary and intersectoral approach, putting patients at the centre of ICU design. The purpose is to fundamentally redesign the ICU environment to not only achieve survival, but provide a superior recovery experience, optimised outcomes of care and quality of life beyond, incorporating the patient’s needs and wishes into an improved ICU design. The project team is working with ICUs across Metro North, but also partnering with other ICUs across the state and nationally. The project team, comprising clinicians and researchers (including nursing, allied health, psychology, psychiatry and intensive care specialists), have worked closely with patients and world leading industry partners such as Philips, Getinge, Ascom and Lendlease, to reconceptualise intensive care, co-designing an ultra-modern recovery focussed ICU bedspace. Using advanced technology and evidence-based design, the proposed new bedspace tailors the care environment to patient’s shifting clinical needs and personal preferences.

    The adverse impact of critical illness and an ICU admission on patients’ circadian rhythms are well known. The sleep deprivation experienced by patients spending prolonged periods in an ICU and the loss of their normal circadian rhythms have been documented in multiple studies. However, there is scant information about the impact of the physical and sensory environment on patients circadian rhythms, and we are not aware of any studies investigating how a modified / improved ICU bedspace environment impacts on patients circadian rhythms. Similarly, there is limited information available about the longer term impact this loss of circadian rhythm has on patients, and whether it impacts on their ability to recover physically, cognitively and/or psychologically.

    This PhD project is a part of the larger ICU of the Future project. It is a collaborative project with the UQ IMB, aiming to analyse how the ICU environment impacts on patients’ circadian rhythms and how an improved environment impacts the circadian rhythms of patients during their ICU admission, and how this affects the recovery of their physical, cognitive and mental health.

  • Circadian regulation of protein glycosylation

    Protein glycosylation plays an important role in protein maturation, trafficking and secretion. Our recent evidences suggest that glycosylation and synthesis of gangliosides could be a rhythmic process regulated by the circadian clock. The goal of this project is to characterize this never described circadian process as well as the involved mechanisms.

  • Impact of circadian clock disruption on the development, growth, sleep and learning of the zebra finch

    The circadian clock orchestrates virtually all aspects of physiology so that organisms may better anticipate predictable daily changes caused by the Earth’s rotation. Consequently, disruption of circadian rhythms, or chronodisruption, is associated with several pathological or psychological conditions. Nevertheless, most research has focussed on nocturnal rodents, with little information on diurnal animals. This project proposes to study the impact of chronodisruption on the physiology of a diurnal animal: the common Australian zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata). In collaboration with Prof. Kate Buchanan (Deakin University), we will study the impact on chronodisruption on the physiology of the zebra finch: reproduction, development, growth, sleep and learning. This project will provide a global and comprehensive study of the impact of chronodisruption on the life cycle of a diurnal passerine. This will allow the evaluation of the impact of environmental perturbation on the life cycle of this bird and, more globally, provide new information of the impact of chronodisruption on diurnal animals.

  • Role of the autonomic nervous system in the rhythmic regulation of animal physiology by light

    Light exposure has a strong influence on animal physiology. However, its effect on development and aging are still poorly described, as well as the involved mechanisms remain unknown. The goal of this project is to describe these mechanisms and study the impact of adverse light exposure on development, metabolism and aging.

Supervision history

Current supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Associate Professor Frederic Gachon directly for media enquiries about:

  • Chrononutrition
  • Circadian clocks
  • Circadian rhythms
  • Feeding rhythms
  • Liver
  • Metabolic Diseases
  • sex specific physiology
  • System biology

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