Meal Timing Regulates the Human Circadian System

Jun 6, 2017Current biology : CB

Meal Timing Influences the Human Body Clock

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Abstract

Plasma glucose rhythms were delayed by 5.69 ± 1.29 hr after a 5-hour delay in meal timing.

  • Meal timing did not influence sleep parameters or subjective hunger and sleepiness.
  • Markers of the master clock, including plasma melatonin and cortisol, were unaffected by the timing of meals.
  • Average plasma glucose concentration decreased by 0.27 ± 0.05 mM following late meals.
  • In adipose tissue, rhythms of a key clock gene (PER2 mRNA) were delayed by 0.97 ± 0.29 hr.
  • Feeding time may regulate human molecular clocks, which could explain changes in plasma glucose.

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