Characterizing 24-Hour Skeletal Muscle Gene Expression Alongside Metabolic and Endocrine Responses Under Diurnal Conditions

Author:

Smith Harry A1,Templeman Iain1,Davis Max1,Slater Tommy2ORCID,Clayton David J2,Varley Ian2ORCID,James Lewis J3,Middleton Benita4,Johnston Jonathan D4,Karagounis Leonidas G56,Tsintzas Kostas7ORCID,Thompson Dylan1,Gonzalez Javier T1,Walhin Jean-Philippe1,Betts James A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Nutrition, Exercise and Metabolism, Department for Health, University of Bath , Bath , UK , BA2 7AY

2. Musculoskeletal Physiology Research Group, Sport, Health and Performance Enhancement Research Centre, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University , Nottingham , UK , NG1 4FQ

3. National Centre for Sport and Exercise Medicine, School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University , Loughborough , UK , LE11 3TU

4. Section of Chronobiology, School of Biosciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey , Guildford , UK , GU2 7XH

5. Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern , 3012 Bern , Switzerland

6. Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research (MMIHR), Australian Catholic University (ACU) , Melbourne, VIC 3000 , Australia

7. MRC Versus Arthritis Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research, School of Life Sciences, University of Nottingham, Queen's Medical Centre , Nottingham , UK , NG7 2UH

Abstract

Abstract Context Skeletal muscle plays a central role in the storage, synthesis, and breakdown of nutrients, yet little research has explored temporal responses of this human tissue, especially with concurrent measures of systemic biomarkers of metabolism. Objective To characterize temporal profiles in skeletal muscle expression of genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, lipid metabolism, circadian clocks, and autophagy and descriptively relate them to systemic metabolites and hormones during a controlled laboratory protocol. Methods Ten healthy adults (9M/1F, [mean ± SD] age 30 ± 10 years; BMI 24.1 ± 2.7 kg·m−2) rested in the laboratory for 37 hours with all data collected during the final 24 hours (08:00–08:00 hours). Participants ingested hourly isocaloric liquid meal replacements alongside appetite assessments during waking before a sleep opportunity from 22:00 to 07:00 hours. Blood samples were collected hourly for endocrine and metabolite analyses, with muscle biopsies occurring every 4 hours from 12:00 to 08:00 hours the following day to quantify gene expression. Results Plasma insulin displayed diurnal rhythmicity peaking at 18:04 hours. Expression of skeletal muscle genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism (Name, Acrophase [hours]: GLUT4, 14:40; PPARGC1A, 16:13; HK2, 18:24) and lipid metabolism (FABP3, 12:37; PDK4, 05:30; CPT1B, 12:58) displayed 24-hour rhythmicity that reflected the temporal rhythm of insulin. Equally, circulating glucose (00:19 hours), nonesterified fatty acids (04:56), glycerol (04:32), triglyceride (23:14), urea (00:46), C-terminal telopeptide (05:07), and cortisol (22:50) concentrations also all displayed diurnal rhythmicity. Conclusion Diurnal rhythms were present in human skeletal muscle gene expression as well systemic metabolites and hormones under controlled diurnal conditions. The temporal patterns of genes relating to carbohydrate and lipid metabolism alongside circulating insulin are consistent with diurnal rhythms being driven in part by the diurnal influence of cyclic feeding and fasting.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

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