Original Article
Skeletal muscle in healthy humans exhibits a day-night rhythm in lipid metabolism

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2020.100989Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Human muscle lipid droplet content varies across the day-night cycle.

  • Whole muscle lipid composition varies across the day-night cycle.

  • Rhythmicity of the lipidome is associated with fatty acid acyl chain length.

Abstract

Objective

Human energy metabolism is under the regulation of the molecular circadian clock; we recently reported that mitochondrial respiration displays a day-night rhythm under study conditions that are similar to real life. Mitochondria are interconnected with lipid droplets, which are of importance in fuel utilization and play a role in muscle insulin sensitivity. Here, we investigated if skeletal muscle lipid content and composition also display day-night rhythmicity in healthy, lean volunteers.

Methods

Skeletal muscle biopsies were obtained from 12 healthy lean male volunteers every 5 h over a 24 h period. Volunteers were provided with standardized meals, and biopsies were taken 4.5 h after each last meal. Lipid droplet size and number were investigated by confocal microscopy. Additionally, the muscle lipidome was assessed using UPLC/HRMS-based semi-targeted lipidomics.

Results

Confocal microscopy revealed diurnal differences in intramyocellular lipid content (P < 0.05) and lipid droplet size in oxidative type 1 muscle fibers (P < 0.01). Lipidomics analysis revealed that 13% of all detected lipids displayed significant day-night rhythmicity. The most rhythmic lipid species were glycerophospholipids and diacylglycerols (DAG), with the latter being the largest fraction (>50% of all rhythmic species). DAG levels showed a day-night pattern with a trough at 1 PM and a peak at 4 AM.

Conclusions

Using two distinct methods, our findings show that myocellular lipid content and whole muscle lipid composition vary across the day-night cycle under normal living conditions. In particular, day-night rhythmicity was present in over half of the DAG lipid species. Future studies are needed to investigate whether rhythmicity in DAG is functionally related to insulin sensitivity and how this might be altered in prediabetes.

Keywords

Circadian clock
Lipidomics
Lipid metabolism
Human skeletal muscle

Cited by (0)

5

Ntsiki M. Held and Jakob Wefers contributed equally to this work.