Habitual nappers and non-nappers differ in circadian rhythms of LIPE expression in abdominal adipose tissue explants
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Zambrano, Carolina; Kulyté, Agné; Luján, Juan; Rivero Gutiérrez, Belén; Sánchez De Medina López-Huertas, Fermín; Martínez Augustín, María Olga; Ryden, Mikael; Scheer, Frank A. J. L.; Garaulet, MartaEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
lipolysis obesity circadian
Fecha
2023-06-09Referencia bibliográfica
Zambrano C, Kulyté A, Luján J, Rivero-Gutierrez B, Sánchez de Medina F, Martínez-Augustin O, Ryden M, Scheer FAJL and Garaulet M (2023) Habitual nappers and non-nappers differ in circadian rhythms of LIPE expression in abdominal adipose tissue explants. Front. Endocrinol. 14:1166961. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2023.1166961
Patrocinador
PID2020-112768RB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; NIDDK R01DK105072; NHLBI R01HL140574; PID-2020-12014RB-I00 funded by MCIN; PI21/00952 funded by FIS.Resumen
Background and purpose: Napping is a widespread practice worldwide and has in recent years been linked to increased abdominal adiposity. Lipase E or LIPE encodes the protein hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL), an enzyme that plays an important role in lipid mobilization and exhibits a circadian expression rhythm in human adipose tissue. We hypothesized that habitual napping may impact the circadian expression pattern of LIPE, which in turn may attenuate lipid mobilization and induce abdominal fat accumulation.
Methods: Abdominal adipose tissue explants from participants with obesity (n =17) were cultured for a 24-h duration and analyzed every 4 h. Habitual nappers (n = 8) were selected to match non-nappers (n = 9) in age, sex, BMI, adiposity, and metabolic syndrome traits. Circadian LIPE expression rhythmicity was
analyzed using the cosinor method.
Results: Adipose tissue explants exhibited robust circadian rhythms in LIPE expression in non-nappers. In contrast, nappers had a flattened rhythm. LIPE amplitude was decreased in nappers as compared with non-nappers (71% lower). The decrease in amplitude among nappers was related to the frequency of napping (times per week) where a lower rhythm amplitude was associated with a higher napping frequency (r = -0.80; P = 0.018). Confirmatory analyses in the activity of LIPE’s protein (i.e., HSL) also showed a significant rhythm in nonnappers, whereas significance in the activity of HSL was lost among nappers.