Intermittent Fasting Sustainably Improves Glucose Tolerance in Normal Weight Male Mice Through Histone Hyperacetylation

Author:

Endo Sho1,Uto Asuka1ORCID,Miyashita Kazutoshi12ORCID,Sato Masaaki1,Inoue Hiroyuki1,Fujii Kentaro1,Hagiwara Aika1,Ryuzaki Masaki1,Oshida Takuma1,Kinouchi Kenichiro1,Itoh Hiroshi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine , Tokyo, 160-8582 , Japan

2. Department of Internal Medicine, International University of Health and Welfare Mita Hospital , Tokyo, 108-8329 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract To explore the mechanism by which intermittent fasting (IF) exerts prolonged effects after discontinuation, we examined mice that had been subjected to 4 cycles of fasting for 72 hours and ad libitum feeding for 96 hours per week (72hIF), followed by 4 weeks of ad libitum feeding, focusing on expression of genes for lipid metabolism in the skeletal muscle and histone acetylation in the promoter region. The 72hIF regimen resulted in metabolic remodeling, characterized by enhanced lipid utilization and mitochondrial activation in the muscle. This long-term IF (72hIF) caused stronger metabolic effects than alternate day fasting (24hIF) wherein fasting and refeeding are repeated every 24 hours. Upregulation of lipid oxidation genes and an increase in oxygen utilization were sustained even at 4 weeks after discontinuation of 72hIF, associated with histone hyperacetylation of the promoter region of uncoupling protein 3 (Ucp3) and carnitine palmitoyl transferase 1b (Cpt1b) genes. An increase in leucine owing to fasting-induced muscle degradation was suggested to lead to the histone acetylation. These findings support the previously unappreciated notion that sustainable promotion of histone acetylation in lipid oxidation genes of the muscle and adipose tissues during and after IF may contribute to sustained metabolic effects of IF.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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