| Literature DB >> 34926544 |
Alice Glaves1, Francisco Díaz-Castro2, Javiera Farías3, Rodrigo Ramírez-Romero3, Jose E Galgani1,3, Rodrigo Fernández-Verdejo3,4.
Abstract
Adipose tissue total amount, distribution, and phenotype influence metabolic health. This may be partially mediated by the metabolic effects that these adipose tissue characteristics exert on the nearby and distant tissues. Thus, adipose tissue may influence the capacity of cells, tissues, and the organism to adapt fuel oxidation to fuel availability, i.e., their metabolic flexibility (MetF). Our aim was to systematically review the evidence for an association between adipose tissue characteristics and MetF in response to metabolic challenges in human adults. We searched in PubMed (last search on September 4, 2021) for reports that measured adipose tissue characteristics (total amount, distribution, and phenotype) and MetF in response to metabolic challenges (as a change in respiratory quotient) in humans aged 18 to <65 years. Any study design was considered, and the risk of bias was assessed with a checklist for randomized and non-randomized studies. From 880 records identified, 22 remained for the analysis, 10 of them measured MetF in response to glucose plus insulin stimulation, nine in response to dietary challenges, and four in response to other challenges. Our main findings were that: (a) MetF to glucose plus insulin stimulation seems inversely associated with adipose tissue total amount, waist circumference, and visceral adipose tissue; and (b) MetF to dietary challenges does not seem associated with adipose tissue total amount or distribution. In conclusion, evidence suggests that adipose tissue may directly or indirectly influence MetF to glucose plus insulin stimulation, an effect probably explained by skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity. Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO [CRD42020167810].Entities:
Keywords: body composition; fuel oxidation; metabolic health; obesity; respiratory quotient
Year: 2021 PMID: 34926544 PMCID: PMC8678067 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.744187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Selection of studies. (A) PRISMA flow diagram. *Unavailable for download in PubMed, ResearchGate (including a request to the authors), or other online websites. (B) Additional criteria to identify the most relevant evidence regarding the association between adipose tissue characteristics and metabolic flexibility (MetF). ΔRQ, change in respiratory quotient in response to a metabolic challenge.
Summary of reports that measured MetF in response to glucose plus insulin infusions (ΔRQ = insulin-stimulated RQ – fasting RQ).
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| Amador et al. ( | 8-week exercise training | FM by DXA | Healthy | 10/0 | 22.5 [SEM 0.8] | Pre 0.07 [SEM 0.01]; | Pre 29.3% [SEM 2.1]; 28.0% [SEM 2.0] | WHR: pre 0.89 [SEM 0.01]; post 0.87 [SEM 0.01] | Training decreased FM (%) in both groups, but MetF did not change; suggests no association. Not possible to determine association for WHR |
| Healthy with family history of T2D | 10/0 | 23.4 [SEM 0.9] | Pre 0.08 [0.02]; post 0.11 [SEM 0.02] | Pre 31.6% [SEM 2.0]; | WHR: pre 0.86 [SEM 0.01]; post 0.84 [0.01] | ||||
| Bak et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by DXA | Healthy NW | 9/0 | 24 [range 21–33] | Fasting RQ 0.82 [ | 10.2 [range 7.4–14.0] kg | – | OB had higher FM, but lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Healthy OB | 9/0 | 24 [range 21–35] | Fasting RQ 0.80 [ | 41.1 [range 34.1–54.7] | – | ||||
| Adamska et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by BIA | Healthy NW | 0/22 | 24.3 [ | 0.08 [ | 24.1% [ | WC: 72.3 [ | OW/OB had higher FM and WC, but lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Healthy OW/OB | 0/26 | 25.1 [ | 0.01 [ | 39.4% [ | WC: 95.6 [ | ||||
| Adamska et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by BIA | Healthy NW | 0/14 | 26.6 [ | 0.06 [ | 23.7% [ | WC: 73.9 [ | OW/OB had higher FM and WC, but lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Healthy OW/OB | 0/16 | 26.9 [ | 0.001 [ | 39.7% [ | WC: 98.1 [ | ||||
| Adamska et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by BIA | Healthy NW | 6/19 | 25.1 [ | 0.05 [ | 23.2% [ | WC: 74.2 [ | OB had higher FM and WC, but lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Healthy OW | 3/9 | 25.0 [ | 0.02 [ | 30.4% [ | WC: 85.3 [ | ||||
| Healthy OB | 3/13 | 28.3 [ | −0.04 [ | 42.9% [ | WC: 104.1 [ | ||||
| Ukropcova et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by DXA; VAT by CT | Healthy NW/OW/OB | 34/0 | 22.3 [ | 0.098 [ | 16.8 [ | VAT: 1.9 [ | MetF was inversely associated with FM (kg: |
| Healthy NW/OW/OB with family history of T2D | 16/0 | 22.3 [ | 0.077 [ | 17.0 [ | VAT: 2.1 [ | ||||
| Ukropcova et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by DXA | Healthy NW/OW/OB | 16/0 | 22.4 [ | 0.074 [ | 15.89 [ | WC: 82.5 [ | FM (%) was inversely associated with MetF ( |
| Sparks et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by DXA; VAT by CT; SAT not reported | Healthy NW/OW/OB men | 56/0 | 22.6 [ | 0.09 [ | 20.3% [ | WHR: 0.87 [ | Groups had different FM, WHR, VAT, SAT, and MetF; suggests association. VAT was inversely associated with MetF in men ( |
| Healthy NW/OW/OB women | 0/22 | 22.7 [ | 0.14 [ | 32.7% [ | WHR: 0.78 [ | ||||
| Chomentowski et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by DXA | Insulin-sensitive NW | 3/9 | 47.0 [SEM 2.1] | 0.15 [SEM 0.02] | 21.2 [SEM 1.3] kg, 32.6% [SEM 2.0] | WC: 81.8 [SEM 1.7] cm | Groups with higher FM and WC had lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Insulin-resistant non-diabetic | 5/12 | 44.0 [SEM 1.7] | 0.07 [SEM 0.01] | 39.8 [SEM 1.6] kg | WC: 110.7 [SEM 2.8] cm | ||||
| T2D | 4/7 | 44.0 [SEM 2.7] | 0.05 [SEM 0.01] | 38.2 [SEM 2.5] kg | WC: 109.4 [SEM 2.4] cm | ||||
| Karczewska-Kupczewska et al. ( | Cross-sectional | FM by BIA | Healthy NW | 0/24 | 24.1 [ | 0.06 [ | 25.56% [ | WC: 71.04 [ | Groups had different FM and WC, but similar MetF. Suggests no association |
| Anorexia nervosa | 0/21 | 22.4 [ | 0.05 [ | 12.93% [ | WC: 61.05 [ | ||||
Data are mean with standard deviation (SD) or standard error of the mean (SEM), frequencies or percentages.
The method to measure WC or WHR was assumed as tape measure in all reports, because that is the standard procedure. ΔRQ, change in respiratory quotient; BIA, bioelectric impedance; CT, computed tomography scanning; DXA, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; FM, fat mass; MetF, metabolic flexibility; NW, normal-weight or lean; OB, obesity; OW, overweight; SAT, subcutaneous adipose tissue; T2D, type 2 diabetes; VAT, visceral adipose tissue; WHR, waist-to-hip ratio; WC, waist circumference.
P < 0.05,
P < 0.01, and
P < 0.001.
Summary of reports that measured MetF in response to dietary challenges.
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| Lightowler et al. ( | 12-week energy-reduced diet | Post-prandial – fasting | FM by air-displacement plethysmography | Healthy OW/OB, sucrose-supplemented diet | 5/20 | 41.2 [ | Pre 0.07 [ | Pre 40.1% [ | WC: pre 90.7 [ | Not possible to determine association for FM or WC |
| Healthy OW/OB, isomaltulose-supplemented diet | 4/21 | 40.2 [ | Pre 0.04 [ | Pre 38.9% [ | WC: pre 91.4 [ | FM decreased, but MetF did not change; suggests no association. Not possible to determine association for WC | ||||
| Rudwill et al. ( | 21-day bed rest in control or protein supplemented conditions (cross-over) | Max – min (over 420 min post-prandial) | FM by DXA; SAT, VAT, calf fat, and liver fat by MRI | Healthy NW, control condition | 9/0 | 31.0 [SEM 2.1] | MetF decreased similarly in control and protein supplemented | Pre 18.6 [SEM | SAT: pre 8,574 [SEM 980] px; post 8,049 [SEM 842] px | The decrease in SAT and the increase in calf fat were accompanied by decreases in MetF; suggests association. FM, VAT, and liver fat did not change as MetF; suggests no association |
| Healthy NW, protein supplemented condition | Pre 17.7 [SEM 1.1] kg, 22.9% [SEM 1.0]; post 18.1 [SEM 1.1] kg, 23.5% [SEM 1.0] | SAT: pre 8,887 [SEM 1,058] px; post 7,646 [SEM 1,021] px | ||||||||
| Kahlhöfer et al. ( | 1-week overfeeding, 3-week energy restriction, and 2-week | iAUC after oral glucose | FM by MRI | Healthy NW/OW, 65% energy as CHO, and refeed with high ( | 16/0 | 24.2 [ | MetF did not change during refeeding (high glycemic CHO: −0.14 [ | FM increased during refeeding (high glycemic CHO: 1.7 [ | – | The increases in FM during refeeding were not accompanied by changes in MetF. Suggests no association |
| Healthy NW/OW, 50% energy as CHO, and refeed with high ( | 16/0 | 26.8 [ | MetF did not change during refeeding (high glycemic CHO: 0.02 [ | FM increased during refeeding (high glycemic CHO: 1.1 [ | – | |||||
| Bergouignan et al. ( | 1-month detraining | Variance following two consecutive meals | FM by DLW | Trained NW healthy | 9/0 | 23.6 [SEM 1.1] | Interventions that reduced physical activity (detraining and bed rest), decreased MetF | Pre 10.5 [SEM 1.2] kg; post 11.4 [SEM 1.5] kg. Pre 14.5% [SEM 1.4]; post 15.8% [SEM 1.8] | – | In interventions that decreased physical activity, the change in FM was not consistent with the change in MetF. Suggests no association |
| 1-month bed rest | Normally-active NW healthy | 0/8 | 33.9 [SEM 0.8] | Pre 14.8 [SEM 3.7] kg; post 14.3 [SEM 1.3] kg. Pre 26.4% [SEM 5.5]; post 27.0% [SEM 1.9] | – | |||||
| Normally-active NW healthy with exercise countermeasure | 0/8 | 33.1 [SEM 0.9] | Pre 14.5 [SEM 3.2] kg; post 13.0 [SEM 1.3] kg | – | ||||||
| 2-month exercise training | Sedentary NW healthy | 10/0 | 27.2 [SEM 2.9] | Interventions that increased physical activity (training), did not change MetF | Pre 17.9 [SEM 1.9] kg; post 17.0 [SEM 1.7] kg. Pre 22.9% [SEM 1.8]; post 21.9% [SEM 1.7] | – | In interventions that increased physical activity, there was no change in FM or MetF. Not possible to determine association | |||
| Sedentary OW healthy | 9/0 | 29.4 [SEM 1.5] | Pre: 31.2 [SEM 1.5] kg; post 30.5 [SEM 1.5] kg. Pre 31.8% [SEM 1.0]; post 31.1% [SEM 1.0] | – | ||||||
| Assaad et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Post-prandial – fasting | – | Healthy NW | 8/0 | 23.5 [SEM 1.4] | No difference between groups up to 120 min post-prandial | – | WC: 93.9 [SEM 2.0] cm | Groups had different WC, but similar MetF. Suggests no association |
| Healthy OB | 7/0 | 22.7 [SEM 1.2] | – | WC: 118.9 [SEM 3.5] cm | ||||||
| Huda et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Post-prandial – fasting | Not reported | Healthy NW/OW | 5/4 | 39.2 [SEM 4.2] | Post-prandial RQ increased* | 23.6% [SEM 3.0] | WC: 77.8 [SEM 5.0] cm | OB had higher FM and WC, but lower MetF. Suggests association |
| Healthy OB | 3/6 | 40.2 [SEM 1.9] | Post-prandial RQ did not change | 50.4% [SEM 1.6] | WC: 146.0 [SEM 10.6] cm | |||||
| Purtell et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Post-prandial – fasting | FM and | Healthy NW | 5/5 | 28.8 [95%CI 26.2–31.4] | No difference between groups | 14.6 [95%CI 10.8–18.5] kg, 24.3% [95%CI 17.7–31.0] | WHR: 0.79 [95%CI 0.74–0.84]. Abdominal FM: 1.03 [95%CI 0.82–1.24] kg, 24.9% [95%CI 19.7–29.8] | Groups had different FM, WHR, and abdominal FM, but similar MetF. Suggests no association |
| OB with ( | 7/5 | 32.3 [95%CI 26.9–37.6] | 40.3 [95%CI 32.9–47.8] kg | WHR: 0.90 [95%CI 0.85–0.95] | ||||||
| Bergouignan et al. ( | 4-day LFD, and 4-day HFD | 24 h LFD – 24 h HFD | Not reported | Healthy NW | 4/6 | 30 [ | 24 h RQ LFD | 17.6 [ | WC: 78.3 [ | Groups had different FM and WC, but similar MetF. Suggests no association |
| Healthy OB | 5/4 | 37 [ | 24 h RQ LFD | 42.2 [ | WC: 107.9 [ | |||||
| Berk et al. ( | 1-week LFD, and 1-week HFD (cross-over) | LFD – HFD | FM by DXA; SAT and VAT by MRI | Healthy NW/OW/OB African-American | 0/21 | 32.8 [ | LFD RQ 0.862 | 29.3 [ | WHR: 0.84 [ | Groups had similar FM, WHR, VAT, and SAT, but different MetF. Suggests no association |
| Healthy NW/OW/OB Caucasian | 0/21 | 34.9 [ | LFD RQ 0.872 | 29.1 [ | WHR: 0.83 [ | |||||
Data are mean with standard deviation (SD) or standard error of the mean (SEM), frequencies or percentages.
The method to measure WC or WHR was assumed as tape measure in all reports, because that is the standard procedure. ΔRQ, change in respiratory quotient; 95%CI, 95% confidence intervals; CHO, carbohydrates; DLW, doubly labeled water; DXA, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; FM, fat mass; HFD, high-fat diet; iAUC, incremental area under the curve; LFD, low-fat diet; MetF, metabolic flexibility; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NW, normal-weight or lean; SAT, subcutaneous adipose tissue; OB, obesity; OW, overweight; T2D, type 2 diabetes; VAT, visceral adipose tissue; WHR, waist-to-hip ratio; WC, waist circumference.
P < 0.05,
P < 0.01, and
*P < 0.001.
Summary of reports that measured MetF in response to sleep, physical activity, and epinephrine infusion.
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| Mynatt et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 24 h – sleep | Not reported | Metabolically inflexible | 7/7 | 33.9 [SEM 13.0] | 24 h RQ: 0.90 [SEM 0.03]; Sleep RQ: 0.90 [SEM 0.03] | 32.1 [SEM 18.0] kg, 34.3% [SEM 12.1] | WC: 99.7 [SEM 22.7] cm | Groups had similar adipose tissue characteristics. Suggests no association |
| Metabolically flexible | 8/8 | 26.1 [SEM 6.3] | 24 h RQ: 0.89 [SEM 0.06]; Sleep RQ: 0.84 [SEM 0.08] | 26.4 [SEM 23.7] kg, 28.2% [SEM 14.6] | WC: 93.9 [SEM 27.8] cm | |||||
| Rynders et al. ( | 3-day eucaloric feeding and 3-day overfeeding | Awake – sleep | FM by DXA | Healthy NW/OW, OB-prone | 8/14 | 28.5 [ | OB-resistant had higher MetF in response to overfeeding | 18.4 [ | – | The difference in MetF remained after adjusting for FM. Suggests no association |
| Healthy NW, OB-resistant | 16/14 | 28.0 [ | 11.9 [ | – | ||||||
| Júdice et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Variance during three physical activities | FM and trunk fat by DXA | Healthy NW/OW/OB men | 25/0 | 32.5 [ | 0.008 [ | 16.5 [ | Trunk fat: 8.5 [ | MetF (adjusted for sex and age) was associated with FM (%) and trunk fat (%) in inverse regression, but not linear models. Suggests association |
| Healthy NW/OW/OB women | 0/25 | 38.0 [ | 0.008 [ | 20.8 [ | Trunk fat: 9.4 [ | |||||
| Berk et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Post – pre epinephrine infusion | FM by densitometry; SAT and VAT by MRI | Healthy OW/OB African-American | 0/9 | 38 [ | Pre 0.916 [ | 36.4 [ | WHR: 0.83 [ | Groups had similar FM, WHR, VAT, and SAT, but different MetF. Suggests no association |
| Healthy OW/OB Caucasian | 0/8 | 36 [ | Pre 0.939 [ | 37.1 [ | WHR: 0.86 [ | |||||
Data are mean with standard deviation (SD) or standard error of the mean (SEM), frequencies or percentages.
The method to measure WC was assumed as a tape measure in all reports because that is the standard procedure. ΔRQ, change in respiratory quotient; DXA, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; FM, fat mass; MetF, metabolic flexibility; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NW, normal-weight or lean; OB, obesity; OW, overweight; SAT, subcutaneous adipose tissue; VAT, visceral adipose tissue; WHR, waist-to-hip ratio; WC, waist circumference.
P < 0.01.