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  4. Lipidomics reveals diurnal lipid oscillations in human skeletal muscle persisting in cellular myotubes cultured in vitro
 
research article

Lipidomics reveals diurnal lipid oscillations in human skeletal muscle persisting in cellular myotubes cultured in vitro

Loizides-Mangold, Ursula
•
Perrin, Laurent
•
Vandereycken, Bart
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2017
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)

Circadian clocks play an important role in lipid homeostasis, with impact on various metabolic diseases. Due to the central role of skeletal muscle in whole-body metabolism, we aimed at studying muscle lipid profiles in a temporal manner. Moreover, it has not been shown whether lipid oscillations in peripheral tissues are driven by diurnal cycles of rest-activity and food intake or are able to persist in vitro in a cell-autonomous manner. To address this, we investigated lipid profiles over 24 h in human skeletal muscle in vivo and in primary human myotubes cultured in vitro. Glycerolipids, glycerophos-pholipids, and sphingolipids exhibited diurnal oscillations, suggesting a widespread circadian impact on muscle lipid metabolism. Notably, peak levels of lipid accumulation were in phase coherence with core clock gene expression in vivo and in vitro. The percentage of oscillating lipid metabolites was comparable between muscle tissue and cultured myotubes, and temporal lipid profiles correlatedwith transcript profiles of genes implicated in their biosynthesis. Lipids enriched in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane oscillated in a highly coordinated manner in vivo and in vitro. Lipid metabolite oscillations were strongly attenuated upon siRNA-mediated clock disruption in human primary myotubes. Taken together, our data suggest an essential role for endogenous cell-autonomous human skeletal muscle oscillators in regulating lipid metabolism independent of external synchronizers, such as physical activity or food intake.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1705821114
Web of Science ID

WOS:000412653900006

Author(s)
Loizides-Mangold, Ursula
Perrin, Laurent
Vandereycken, Bart
Betts, James A.
Walhin, Jean-Philippe
Templeman, Iain
Chanon, Stephanie
Weger, Benjamin D.
Durand, Christine
Robert, Maud
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Date Issued

2017

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Published in
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America (PNAS)
Volume

114

Issue

41

Start page

E8565

End page

E8574

Subjects

lipid metabolism

•

circadian clock

•

human skeletal muscle

•

human primary myotubes

•

lipidomics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ENT  
Available on Infoscience
November 8, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/141989
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