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Daytime eating prevents internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance in night work

Daytime eating prevents internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance in night work
Daytime eating prevents internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance in night work
Night work increases diabetes risk. Misalignment between the central circadian “clock” and daily behaviors, typical in night workers, impairs glucose tolerance, likely due to internal misalignment between central and peripheral circadian rhythms. Whether appropriate circadian alignment of eating can prevent internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance is unknown. In a 14-day circadian paradigm, we assessed glycemic control during simulated night work with either nighttime or daytime eating. Assessment of central (body temperature) and peripheral (glucose and insulin) endogenous circadian rhythms happened during constant routine protocols before and after simulated night work. Nighttime eating led to misalignment between central and peripheral (glucose) endogenous circadian rhythms and impaired glucose tolerance, whereas restricting meals to daytime prevented it. These findings offer a behavioral approach to preventing glucose intolerance in shift workers.
2375-2548
Chellappa, Sarah
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Qian, Jingyi
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Vujovic, Nina
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Morris, Christopher
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Nyugen, Hoa
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Rahman, Nishath
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Srivastav, Suhina
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Kerlin-Monteiro, Kayla
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Wang, Wei
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Aeschbach, Daniel
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Czeisler, Charles
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Adler, Gail
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Shea, Steven
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Garaulet, Marta
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Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
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Chellappa, Sarah
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Qian, Jingyi
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Vujovic, Nina
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Morris, Christopher
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Nyugen, Hoa
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Rahman, Nishath
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Srivastav, Suhina
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Kerlin-Monteiro, Kayla
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Wang, Wei
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Aeschbach, Daniel
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Czeisler, Charles
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Adler, Gail
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Shea, Steven
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Garaulet, Marta
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Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
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Chellappa, Sarah, Qian, Jingyi, Vujovic, Nina, Morris, Christopher, Nyugen, Hoa, Rahman, Nishath, Srivastav, Suhina, Kerlin-Monteiro, Kayla, Wang, Wei, Aeschbach, Daniel, Czeisler, Charles, Adler, Gail, Shea, Steven, Garaulet, Marta and Scheer, Frank A.J.L. (2021) Daytime eating prevents internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance in night work. Science Advances, 7 (49). (doi:10.1126/sciadv.abg9910).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Night work increases diabetes risk. Misalignment between the central circadian “clock” and daily behaviors, typical in night workers, impairs glucose tolerance, likely due to internal misalignment between central and peripheral circadian rhythms. Whether appropriate circadian alignment of eating can prevent internal circadian misalignment and glucose intolerance is unknown. In a 14-day circadian paradigm, we assessed glycemic control during simulated night work with either nighttime or daytime eating. Assessment of central (body temperature) and peripheral (glucose and insulin) endogenous circadian rhythms happened during constant routine protocols before and after simulated night work. Nighttime eating led to misalignment between central and peripheral (glucose) endogenous circadian rhythms and impaired glucose tolerance, whereas restricting meals to daytime prevented it. These findings offer a behavioral approach to preventing glucose intolerance in shift workers.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479491
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479491
ISSN: 2375-2548
PURE UUID: 66193cd6-4ed9-4765-b4c1-f0258f3369b6
ORCID for Sarah Chellappa: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6190-464X

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Date deposited: 25 Jul 2023 16:44
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Chellappa ORCID iD
Author: Jingyi Qian
Author: Nina Vujovic
Author: Christopher Morris
Author: Hoa Nyugen
Author: Nishath Rahman
Author: Suhina Srivastav
Author: Kayla Kerlin-Monteiro
Author: Wei Wang
Author: Daniel Aeschbach
Author: Charles Czeisler
Author: Gail Adler
Author: Steven Shea
Author: Marta Garaulet
Author: Frank A.J.L. Scheer

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