Separation of circadian- and behavior-driven metabolite rhythms in humans provides a window on peripheral oscillators and metabolism

Author:

Skene Debra J.ORCID,Skornyakov Elena,Chowdhury Namrata R.,Gajula Rajendra P.ORCID,Middleton Benita,Satterfield Brieann C.ORCID,Porter Kenneth I.,Van Dongen Hans P. A.ORCID,Gaddameedhi ShobhanORCID

Abstract

Misalignment between internal circadian rhythmicity and externally imposed behavioral schedules, such as occurs in shift workers, has been implicated in elevated risk of metabolic disorders. To determine underlying mechanisms, it is essential to assess whether and how peripheral clocks are disturbed during shift work and to what extent this is linked to the central suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) pacemaker and/or misaligned behavioral time cues. Investigating rhythms in circulating metabolites as biomarkers of peripheral clock disturbances may offer new insights. We evaluated the impact of misaligned sleep/wake and feeding/fasting cycles on circulating metabolites using a targeted metabolomics approach. Sequential plasma samples obtained during a 24-h constant routine that followed a 3-d simulated night-shift schedule, compared with a simulated day-shift schedule, were analyzed for 132 circulating metabolites. Nearly half of these metabolites showed a 24-h rhythmicity under constant routine following either or both simulated shift schedules. However, while traditional markers of the circadian clock in the SCN—melatonin, cortisol, and PER3 expression—maintained a stable phase alignment after both schedules, only a few metabolites did the same. Many showed reversed rhythms, lost their rhythms, or showed rhythmicity only under constant routine following the night-shift schedule. Here, 95% of the metabolites with a 24-h rhythmicity showed rhythms that were driven by behavioral time cues externally imposed during the preceding simulated shift schedule rather than being driven by the central SCN circadian clock. Characterization of these metabolite rhythms will provide insight into the underlying mechanisms linking shift work and metabolic disorders.

Funder

DOD | United States Army | MEDCOM | Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

RCUK | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

EC | Seventh Framework Programme

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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