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Late isocaloric eating increases hunger, decreases energy expenditure, and modifies metabolic pathways in adults with overweight and obesity

Late isocaloric eating increases hunger, decreases energy expenditure, and modifies metabolic pathways in adults with overweight and obesity
Late isocaloric eating increases hunger, decreases energy expenditure, and modifies metabolic pathways in adults with overweight and obesity
Late eating has been linked to obesity risk. It is unclear whether this is caused by changes in hunger and appetite, energy expenditure, or both, and whether molecular pathways in adipose tissues are involved. Therefore, we conducted a randomized, controlled, crossover trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02298790) to determine the effects of late versus early eating while rigorously controlling for nutrient intake, physical activity, sleep, and light exposure. Late eating increased hunger (p < 0.0001) and altered appetite-regulating hormones, increasing waketime and 24-h ghrelin:leptin ratio (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.006, respectively). Furthermore, late eating decreased waketime energy expenditure (p = 0.002) and 24-h core body temperature (p = 0.019). Adipose tissue gene expression analyses showed that late eating altered pathways involved in lipid metabolism, e.g., p38 MAPK signaling, TGF-β signaling, modulation of receptor tyrosine kinases, and autophagy, in a direction consistent with decreased lipolysis/increased adipogenesis. These findings show converging mechanisms by which late eating may result in positive energy balance and increased obesity risk.
1550-4131
1486-1498
Vujović, Nina
42924b6f-7cbe-4ef5-9236-a9c886d9eaf2
Piron, Matthew J.
2c9f9e3e-8361-4bf5-90e4-f0809bf3048c
Qian, Jingyi
d1dc4b30-7a87-4958-93a9-adf29645de97
Chellappa, Sarah L.
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Nedeltcheva, Arlet
d7b32c37-d8df-4a44-86bd-c632ee01b321
Barr, David
2b157604-be78-427e-869f-90dc4b043ac2
Heng, Su Wei
44763733-54b3-48dd-9966-3d1c250545da
Kerlin, Kayla
fee3ba3a-9623-4d42-8124-4467a43dbd1b
Srivastav, Suhina
52f33022-13c1-4d8c-a9d2-f6adc8c0f360
Wang, Wei
f3e745ca-095b-4aa3-ab7c-1bcdd7f38298
Shoji, Brent
ab3f173d-cc59-4340-ae25-3ef345b6f4de
Garaulet, Marta
38d4d03b-b1ea-48d7-9a72-373e090ea896
Brady, Matthew J.
fb5ec399-54e3-4c03-b326-316a396e645d
Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
42a0eb95-0127-4f42-883a-15bbbac85494
Vujović, Nina
42924b6f-7cbe-4ef5-9236-a9c886d9eaf2
Piron, Matthew J.
2c9f9e3e-8361-4bf5-90e4-f0809bf3048c
Qian, Jingyi
d1dc4b30-7a87-4958-93a9-adf29645de97
Chellappa, Sarah L.
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Nedeltcheva, Arlet
d7b32c37-d8df-4a44-86bd-c632ee01b321
Barr, David
2b157604-be78-427e-869f-90dc4b043ac2
Heng, Su Wei
44763733-54b3-48dd-9966-3d1c250545da
Kerlin, Kayla
fee3ba3a-9623-4d42-8124-4467a43dbd1b
Srivastav, Suhina
52f33022-13c1-4d8c-a9d2-f6adc8c0f360
Wang, Wei
f3e745ca-095b-4aa3-ab7c-1bcdd7f38298
Shoji, Brent
ab3f173d-cc59-4340-ae25-3ef345b6f4de
Garaulet, Marta
38d4d03b-b1ea-48d7-9a72-373e090ea896
Brady, Matthew J.
fb5ec399-54e3-4c03-b326-316a396e645d
Scheer, Frank A.J.L.
42a0eb95-0127-4f42-883a-15bbbac85494

Vujović, Nina, Piron, Matthew J., Qian, Jingyi, Chellappa, Sarah L., Nedeltcheva, Arlet, Barr, David, Heng, Su Wei, Kerlin, Kayla, Srivastav, Suhina, Wang, Wei, Shoji, Brent, Garaulet, Marta, Brady, Matthew J. and Scheer, Frank A.J.L. (2022) Late isocaloric eating increases hunger, decreases energy expenditure, and modifies metabolic pathways in adults with overweight and obesity. Cell Metabolism, 34 (10), 1486-1498. (doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2022.09.007).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Late eating has been linked to obesity risk. It is unclear whether this is caused by changes in hunger and appetite, energy expenditure, or both, and whether molecular pathways in adipose tissues are involved. Therefore, we conducted a randomized, controlled, crossover trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02298790) to determine the effects of late versus early eating while rigorously controlling for nutrient intake, physical activity, sleep, and light exposure. Late eating increased hunger (p < 0.0001) and altered appetite-regulating hormones, increasing waketime and 24-h ghrelin:leptin ratio (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.006, respectively). Furthermore, late eating decreased waketime energy expenditure (p = 0.002) and 24-h core body temperature (p = 0.019). Adipose tissue gene expression analyses showed that late eating altered pathways involved in lipid metabolism, e.g., p38 MAPK signaling, TGF-β signaling, modulation of receptor tyrosine kinases, and autophagy, in a direction consistent with decreased lipolysis/increased adipogenesis. These findings show converging mechanisms by which late eating may result in positive energy balance and increased obesity risk.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 September 2022
Published date: 4 October 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479525
ISSN: 1550-4131
PURE UUID: bec8e60a-bc89-45c7-8d4f-8c2d3f626ef2
ORCID for Sarah L. Chellappa: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6190-464X

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Date deposited: 25 Jul 2023 16:56
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Nina Vujović
Author: Matthew J. Piron
Author: Jingyi Qian
Author: Sarah L. Chellappa ORCID iD
Author: Arlet Nedeltcheva
Author: David Barr
Author: Su Wei Heng
Author: Kayla Kerlin
Author: Suhina Srivastav
Author: Wei Wang
Author: Brent Shoji
Author: Marta Garaulet
Author: Matthew J. Brady
Author: Frank A.J.L. Scheer

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