Publication: Cold-Induced Thermogenesis Shows a Diurnal Variation That Unfolds Differently in Males and Females.
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Identifiers
Date
2022-02-18
Authors
Straat, Maaike E
Martinez-Tellez, Borja
Sardjoe Mishre, Aashley
Verkleij, Magdalena M A
Kemmeren, Mirjam
Pelsma, Iris C M
Alcantara, Juan M A
Mendez-Gutierrez, Andrea
Kooijman, Sander
Boon, Mariëtte R
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Abstract
Cold exposure mobilizes lipids to feed thermogenic processes in organs, including brown adipose tissue (BAT). In rodents, BAT metabolic activity exhibits a diurnal rhythm, which is highest at the start of the wakeful period. We investigated whether cold-induced thermogenesis displays diurnal variation in humans and differs between the sexes. This randomized crossover study included 24 young and lean male (n = 12) and female (n = 12) participants who underwent 2.5-hour personalized cooling using water-perfused mattresses in the morning (7:45 am) and evening (7:45 pm), with 1 day in between. We measured energy expenditure (EE) and supraclavicular skin temperature in response to cold exposure. In males, cold-induced EE was higher in the morning than in the evening (+54% ± 10% vs +30% ± 7%; P = 0.05) but did not differ between morning and evening in females (+37% ± 9% vs +30% ± 10%; P = 0.42). Only in males, supraclavicular skin temperature upon cold increased more in morning than evening (+0.2 ± 0.1 °C vs -0.2 ± 0.2 °C; P = 0.05). In males, circulating free fatty acid (FFA) levels were increased after morning cold exposure, but not evening (+90% ± 18% vs +9% ± 8%; P Cold-induced thermogenesis is higher in morning than evening in males; however, lipid metabolism is more modulated in the morning than the evening in females.
Description
MeSH Terms
Adipose Tissue, Brown
Circadian Rhythm
Cold Temperature
Cross-Over Studies
Energy Metabolism
Female
Humans
Male
Thermogenesis
Circadian Rhythm
Cold Temperature
Cross-Over Studies
Energy Metabolism
Female
Humans
Male
Thermogenesis
DeCS Terms
Estudios cruzados
Femenino
Frío
Humanos
Masculino
Metabolismo energético
Ritmo circadiano
Tejido adiposo pardo
Termogénesis
Femenino
Frío
Humanos
Masculino
Metabolismo energético
Ritmo circadiano
Tejido adiposo pardo
Termogénesis
CIE Terms
Keywords
brown adipose tissue, cardiometabolic health, circadian rhythm, cold stimulus, gender differences, metabolism
Citation
Straat ME, Martinez-Tellez B, Sardjoe Mishre A, Verkleij MMA, Kemmeren M, Pelsma ICM, et al. Cold-Induced Thermogenesis Shows a Diurnal Variation That Unfolds Differently in Males and Females. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2022 May 17;107(6):1626-1635.