Human metabolic chambers reveal a coordinated metabolic-physiologic response to nutrition

JCI Insight. 2024 Nov 22;9(22):e184279. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.184279.

Abstract

Human studies linking metabolism with organism-wide physiologic function have been challenged by confounding, adherence, and precisionHere, we united physiologic and molecular phenotypes of metabolism during controlled dietary intervention to understand integrated metabolic-physiologic responses to nutrition. In an inpatient study of individuals who underwent serial 24-hour metabolic chamber experiments (indirect calorimetry) and metabolite profiling, we mapped a human metabolome onto substrate oxidation rates and energy expenditure across up to 7 dietary conditions (energy balance, fasting, multiple 200% caloric excess overfeeding of varying fat, protein, and carbohydrate composition). Diets exhibiting greater fat oxidation (e.g., fasting, high-fat) were associated with changes in metabolites within pathways of mitochondrial β-oxidation, ketogenesis, adipose tissue fatty acid liberation, and/or multiple anapleurotic substrates for tricarboxylic acid cycle flux, with inverse associations for diets with greater carbohydrate availability. Changes in each of these metabolite classes were strongly related to 24-hour respiratory quotient (RQ) and substrate oxidation rates (e.g., acylcarnitines related to lower 24-hour RQ and higher 24-hour lipid oxidation), underscoring links between substrate availability, physiology, and metabolism in humans. Physiologic responses to diet determined by gold-standard human metabolic chambers are strongly coordinated with biologically consistent, interconnected metabolic pathways encoded in the metabolome.

Keywords: Amino acid metabolism; Carbohydrate metabolism; Intermediary metabolism; Metabolism.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Calorimetry, Indirect
  • Carnitine / analogs & derivatives
  • Carnitine / metabolism
  • Energy Metabolism* / physiology
  • Fasting / metabolism
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Metabolome*
  • Middle Aged
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Young Adult

Substances

  • acylcarnitine
  • Carnitine