Effect of Short-Term Fasting and Refeeding on Transcriptional Regulation of Metabolic Genes in Human Skeletal Muscle

  1. Henriette Pilegaard12,
  2. Bengt Saltin13 and
  3. P. Darrell Neufer4
  1. 1Copenhagen Muscle Research Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark
  2. 2The August Krogh Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
  3. 3Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark
  4. 4The John B. Pierce Laboratory, Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

    Abstract

    During short-term fasting, substrate utilization in skeletal muscle shifts from predominantly carbohydrate to fat as a means of conserving glucose. To examine the potential influence of short-term fasting and refeeding on transcriptional regulation in skeletal muscle, muscle biopsies were obtained from nine male subjects at rest, after 20 h of fasting, and 1 h after consuming either a high-carbohydrate (CHO trial) or a low-carbohydrate (FAT trial) meal. Fasting induced an increase in transcription of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) (10-fold), lipoprotein lipase (LPL) (∼2-fold), uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) (∼5-fold), and carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) (∼2.5-fold) genes. Surprisingly, transcription of PDK4 and LPL increased further in response to refeeding (both trials) to more than 50-fold and 6- to 10-fold, respectively, over prefasting levels. However, responses varied among subjects with two subjects in particular displaying far greater activation of PDK4 (>100-fold) and LPL (>20-fold) than the other subjects (mean ∼8-fold and ∼2-fold, respectively). Transcription of UCP3 decreased to basal levels after the CHO meal but remained elevated after the FAT meal, whereas CPT I remained elevated after both refeeding meals. The present findings demonstrate that short-term fasting/refeeding in humans alters the transcription of several genes in skeletal muscle related to lipid metabolism. Marked heterogeneity in the transcriptional response to the fasting/refeeding protocol suggests that individual differences in genetic profile may play an important role in adaptive molecular responses to metabolic challenges.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to P. Darrell Neufer, John B. Pierce Laboratory, 290 Congress Ave., New Haven, CT 06519. E-mail: dneufer{at}jbpierce.org.

      Received for publication 16 August 2002 and accepted in revised form 17 December 2002.

      CHO trial, high-carbohydrate regimen; CPT I, carnitine palmitoyltransferase I; FAT trial, low-carbohydrate/high-fat regimen; FFA, free fatty acid; gDNA, genomic DNA; HKII, hexokinase II; LCAD, long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; LPL, lipoprotein lipase; PDH, pyruvate dehydrogenase; PDK4; pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4; UCP 3, uncoupling protein 3.

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