Sitting Interruption Modalities during Prolonged Sitting Acutely Improve Postprandial Metabolome in a Crossover Pilot Trial among Postmenopausal Women

Author:

Patterson Jeffrey S.1ORCID,Rana Brinda K.2ORCID,Gu Haiwei1,Sears Dorothy D.1345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Health Solutions, Arizona State University, 850 N. 5th Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004, USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

3. Department of Family Medicine, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

4. Department of Medicine, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

5. UCSD Moores Cancer Center, 3855 Health Sciences Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

Abstract

Older adults sit during most hours of the day; more than 30% are considered physically inactive. The accumulation of prolonged sitting time is an exercise-independent risk factor for aging-related conditions such as cardiometabolic disease and cancer. Archival plasma samples from a randomized controlled, four-condition crossover study conducted in 10 postmenopausal women with overweight or obesity were analyzed. During 5-hour conditions completed on separate days, the trial tested three interruption modalities: two-minute stands each 20 min (STS), hourly ten-minute standing breaks (Stand), hourly two-minute walks (Walk), and a controlled sit. Fasting baseline and 5-hour end point (2 h postprandial) samples were used for targeted metabolomic profiling. Condition-associated metabolome changes were compared using paired t-tests. STS eliminated the postprandial elevation of amino acid metabolites that was observed in the control. A norvaline derivative shown to have anti-hypertensive and -hyperglycemic effects was significantly increased during Stand and STS. Post-hoc testing identified 19 significantly different metabolites across the interventions. Tight metabolite clustering by condition was driven by amino acid, vasoactive, and sugar metabolites, as demonstrated by partial least squares-discriminant analyses. This exploratory study suggests that brief, low-intensity modalities of interrupting prolonged sitting can acutely elucidate beneficial cardiometabolic changes in postmenopausal women with cardiometabolic risk.

Funder

NASA

National Institute of Aging

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

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