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Human metabolic chambers reveal a coordinated metabolic-physiologic response to nutrition
Andrew S. Perry, … , Jonathan Krakoff, Ravi V. Shah
Andrew S. Perry, … , Jonathan Krakoff, Ravi V. Shah
Published November 22, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(22):e184279. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.184279.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Metabolism

Human metabolic chambers reveal a coordinated metabolic-physiologic response to nutrition

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Abstract

Human studies linking metabolism with organism-wide physiologic function have been challenged by confounding, adherence, and precision. Here, we united physiologic and molecular phenotypes of metabolism during controlled dietary intervention to understand integrated metabolic-physiologic responses to nutrition. In an inpatient study of individuals who underwent serial 24-hour metabolic chamber experiments (indirect calorimetry) and metabolite profiling, we mapped a human metabolome onto substrate oxidation rates and energy expenditure across up to 7 dietary conditions (energy balance, fasting, multiple 200% caloric excess overfeeding of varying fat, protein, and carbohydrate composition). Diets exhibiting greater fat oxidation (e.g., fasting, high-fat) were associated with changes in metabolites within pathways of mitochondrial β-oxidation, ketogenesis, adipose tissue fatty acid liberation, and/or multiple anapleurotic substrates for tricarboxylic acid cycle flux, with inverse associations for diets with greater carbohydrate availability. Changes in each of these metabolite classes were strongly related to 24-hour respiratory quotient (RQ) and substrate oxidation rates (e.g., acylcarnitines related to lower 24-hour RQ and higher 24-hour lipid oxidation), underscoring links between substrate availability, physiology, and metabolism in humans. Physiologic responses to diet determined by gold-standard human metabolic chambers are strongly coordinated with biologically consistent, interconnected metabolic pathways encoded in the metabolome.

Authors

Andrew S. Perry, Paolo Piaggi, Shi Huang, Matthew Nayor, Jane Freedman, Kari E. North, Jennifer E. Below, Clary B. Clish, Venkatesh L. Murthy, Jonathan Krakoff, Ravi V. Shah

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Figure 2

Heterogeneity in metabolic responses to dietary perturbation.

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Heterogeneity in metabolic responses to dietary perturbation.
Here, we p...
Here, we present changes in 5 metabolic parameters (rows) from all dietary chambers, with comparison to the energy balance chamber. Bars represent the mean change across all participants, and points represent individual participants. While most participants followed the average trend, some individuals displayed opposing changes (e.g., in the high-fat chamber, the average change in respiratory quotient was a decrease; however, in some participants, the respiratory quotient increased). Red indicates that the average effect was an increase in the metabolic parameter during the dietary chamber compared with energy balance; blue indicates a decrease.

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