Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Biomarker Core Laboratory, Foundation for Atlanta Veterans Education and Research (FAVER), Atlanta Veterans Affairs Health Care System (AVAHCS), Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Nutr. 2021 Nov 2;151(11):3284-3291. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxab263.
Metabolic abnormalities substantially increase the risk of noncommunicable diseases, which are among the leading causes of mortality globally. Mitigating and preventing these adverse consequences remains challenging due to a limited understanding of metabolic health. Metabolic flexibility, a key tenet of metabolic health, encompasses the responsiveness of interrelated pathways to maintain energy homeostasis throughout daily physiologic challenges, such as the response to meal challenges. One critical underlying research gap concerns the measurement of postprandial metabolic flexibility, which remains incompletely understood. We concisely review the methodology for assessment of postprandial metabolic flexibility in recent human studies. We identify 3 commonalities of study design, specifically the nature of the challenge, nature of the response measured, and approach to data analysis. Primary interventions were acute short-term nutrition challenges, including single- and multiple-macronutrient tolerance tests. Postmeal challenge responses were measured via laboratory assays and instrumentation, based on a diverse set of metabolic flexibility indicators [e.g., energy expenditure (whole-body indirect calorimetry), glucose and insulin kinetics, metabolomics, transcriptomics]. Common standard approaches have been diabetes-centric with single-macronutrient challenges (oral-glucose-tolerance test) to characterize the postprandial response based on glucose and insulin metabolism; or broad measurements of energy expenditure with calculated macronutrient oxidation via indirect calorimetry. Recent methodological advances have included the use of multiple-macronutrient meal challenges that are more representative of physiologic meals consumed by free-living humans, combinatorial approaches for assays and instruments, evaluation of other metabolic flexibility indicators via precision health, systems biology, and temporal perspectives. Omics studies have identified potential novel indicators of metabolic flexibility, which provide greater granularity to prior evidence from canonical approaches. In summary, recent findings indicate the potential for an expanded understanding of postprandial metabolic flexibility, based on nonclassical measurements and methodology, which could represent novel dynamic indicators of metabolic diseases.
代谢异常大大增加了非传染性疾病的风险,这些疾病是全球主要的死亡原因之一。由于对代谢健康的了解有限,减轻和预防这些不良后果仍然具有挑战性。代谢灵活性是代谢健康的一个关键原则,它包括相关途径对维持能量平衡的反应能力,以应对日常生理挑战,例如对膳食挑战的反应。一个关键的研究空白是对餐后代谢灵活性的测量,这方面的理解仍不完整。我们简明扼要地回顾了最近人类研究中评估餐后代谢灵活性的方法学。我们确定了研究设计的 3 个共同点,即挑战的性质、测量的反应性质和数据分析方法。主要干预措施是急性短期营养挑战,包括单和多种宏量营养素耐量测试。餐后挑战反应通过实验室检测和仪器测量进行评估,基于一系列不同的代谢灵活性指标[例如,能量消耗(全身间接测热法)、葡萄糖和胰岛素动力学、代谢组学、转录组学]。常见的标准方法是以糖尿病为中心,采用单宏量营养素挑战(口服葡萄糖耐量试验),根据葡萄糖和胰岛素代谢来描述餐后反应;或通过间接测热法计算宏量营养素氧化来广泛测量能量消耗。最近的方法学进展包括使用更能代表自由生活人群所摄食的生理餐的多种宏量营养素餐挑战、检测和仪器的组合方法、通过精准健康、系统生物学和时间视角评估其他代谢灵活性指标。组学研究已经确定了代谢灵活性的潜在新指标,这些指标为经典方法的先前证据提供了更大的粒度。总之,基于非经典测量和方法,最近的发现表明对餐后代谢灵活性的理解有扩展的潜力,这可能代表代谢疾病的新动态指标。