When
it comes to weight gain, when you eat might be at least as important as what
you eat. That's the conclusion of a study reported in the Cell Press journal
Cell Metabolism published early online on May 17th.
When mice on a high-fat diet are restricted to
eating for eight hours per day, they eat just as much as those who can eat
around the clock, yet they are protected against obesity and other metabolic
ills, the new study shows. The discovery suggests that the health consequences
of a poor diet might result in part from a mismatch between our body clocks and
our eating schedules.
"Every organ has a clock," said lead
author of the study Satchidananda Panda of the Salk Institute for Biological
Studies. That means there are times that our livers, intestines, muscles, and
other organs will work at peak efficiency and other times when they are—more or
less—sleeping.
Those metabolic cycles are critical for
processes from cholesterol breakdown to glucose production, and they should be
primed to turn on when we eat and back off when we don't, or vice versa. When
mice or people eat frequently throughout the day and night, it can throw off
those normal metabolic cycles.
"When we eat randomly, those genes aren't
on completely or off completely," Panda said. The principle is just like
it is with sleep and waking, he explained. If we don't sleep well at night, we
aren't completely awake during the day, and we work less efficiently as a
consequence.
To find out whether restricted feeding
alone—without a change in calorie intake—could prevent metabolic disease,
Panda's team fed mice either a standard or high-fat diet with one of two types
of food access: ad lib feeding or restricted access.
The time-restricted mice on a high-fat diet
were protected from the adverse effects of a high-fat diet and showed
improvements in their metabolic and physiological rhythms. They gained less
weight and suffered less liver damage. The mice also had lower levels of
inflammation, among other benefits.
Panda says there is reason to think our eating
patterns have changed in recent years, as many people have greater access to
food and reasons to stay up into the night, even if just to watch TV. And when
people are awake, they tend to snack.
The findings suggest that restricted meal
times might be an underappreciated lifestyle change to help people keep off the
pounds. At the very least, the new evidence suggests that this is a factor in
the obesity epidemic that should be given more careful consideration.
"The focus has been on what people
eat," Panda said. "We don't collect data on when people eat."
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