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Effects of Fructose/Glucose-rich Diet on Brown Fat in Healthy Subjects (GB7)

Brown Fat Energy Metabolism During Cold Exposure: Effects of Fructose- or Glucose-rich Diet in Healthy Subjects

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03188835
Acronym
GB7
Enrollment
15
Registered
2017-06-15
Start date
2017-05-23
Completion date
2021-04-30
Last updated
2025-01-27

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Type2 Diabetes

Brief summary

Activating brown and beige adipose tissue (herein described as BAT) has been recently recognized as a potential means to increase energy expenditure and lower blood glucose, however, BAT activity appears to be reduced with obesity, aging or Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). BAT has the unique capability to burn large amounts of sugar and fat and effectively dissipate this energy as heat due to the expression of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) which is controlled by a thermogenic gene program of transcription factors, co-activators and protein kinases. Thus, enhancing the thermogenic gene program may be beneficial for treating obesity and T2D. Despite the importance of BAT in regulating metabolism our understanding of the factors which suppress its metabolic activity with obesity, aging and T2D are largely unknown. Recently, it was shown that peripheral serotonin, which is regulated by the tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (Tph1), is a negative regulator of BAT metabolic activity. In addition to serotonin, other studies have indicated that pro-inflammatory stimuli may also inhibit BAT metabolic activity. These data suggest that reduced activation of BAT may be due to increases in peripheral serotonin and inflammation. Importantly, the gut microbiome has recently been recognized as an important regulator of serotonin and inflammatory pathways suggesting the observed effects of the microbiome on obesity, T2D may be mediated in part through reductions in BAT activity. One mechanism by which the environment may impact BAT activity and the thermogenic gene program over the last 3 decades involves changes in our food supply as result of changes in agricultural production (chlorpyrifos, glyphosphate) and the addition of food additives (fructose). These agents have been reported to alter inflammation, serotonin metabolism and the gut microbiome indicating a potential bimodal (direct and indirect via the microbiome) mechanism by which they may alter the thermogenic gene program and contribute to chronic metabolic disease. Thus, our overarching hypothesis is that environmental agents and additives related to food production may contribute to the reduced metabolic activity of BAT. The objective is to identify and characterize how food production agents and additives reduce the metabolic activity of BAT.

Detailed description

Each subject will follow 3 metabolic studies (A, B and C), each lasting 7.5h which includes a 3h acute cold exposure. These studies will be almost identical: same perfusion of tracers, same number of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) acquisitions and same number of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) associated with Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) acquisitions . The difference will be in the diet ingested by the subjects two weeks before each metabolic study: during protocol A, the subjects will follow an isocaloric diet; during protocol B, the subjects will follow the same isocaloric diet supplemented with a daily beverage containing +25% of energy intake from fructose; and during protocol C, the subjects will follow the same isocaloric diet supplemented with a daily beverage containing +25% of energy intake from glucose. Stool samples will be collected for each metabolic study for microbiome flora and metabolites.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTDiet

A 2 weeks of hypercaloric diet supplemented with fructose or glucose

OTHERcold exposure

Acute cold exposure using a water-conditioned cooling suit will be applied from time 0 to 180 min. At the same time mean skin temperature will be measured by 11 thermocouples.

RADIATION18FDG

I.v. injection of 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) will be performed, followed by 30 min dynamic and 50 min wholebody PET/CT scanning.

RADIATION11C-acetate

i.v. injection of 11C-acetate will be performed, followed by 20 min dynamic PET/CT scanning

i.v. administration of 1.5 uCi/min of \[3-3H\]-glucose

i.v. administration of 0.08 umol/kg/min of \[U-13C\]-palmitate

i.v. administration of 0.05 µmol/kg/min of 2H-glycerol

DEVICEMRI/MRS

Visceral and cervico-thoracic MRI and MRS acquisition.

Skeletal muscle activity and shivering intensity will be measured by electromyography using surface electrodes

DEVICEDXA

Lean mass will be determined by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry

DEVICEIndirect calorimetry

VCO2 will be measured by indirect calorimetry between 15 and 20 min every hour until time 180.

Sponsors

McMaster University
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Ottawa
CollaboratorOTHER
Université de Sherbrooke
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
MALE
Age
20 Years to 35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Healthy subjects: subjects with normal glucose tolerance determined according to an oral glucose tolerance test and with a BMI \< 27 kg/m2 without first degree of familial history of type 2 diabetes (parents, siblings).

Exclusion criteria

1. Plasma triglycerides \> 5.0 mmol/L at fasting; 2. More than 2 alcohol consumption per day; 3. More than 1 cigarette per day; 4. History of total cholesterol level \> 7 mmol/L, of cardiovascular disease, hypertensive crisis; 5. Treatment with fibrates, thiazolidinedione, insulin, beta-blockers or other drugs with effects on insulin resistance or lipid metabolism (exception for anti-hypertensive drugs, statins or metformin); 6. Presence of a non-controlled thyroid disease, renal or hepatic disease, history of pancreatitis, bleeding diatheses, cardiovascular disease or any other serious medical conditions; 7. History of serious gastrointestinal disorders (malabsorption, peptic ulcer, gastroesophageal reflux having required a surgery, etc.); 8. Presence of a pacemaker; 9. Have undergone of PET study or CT scan in the past year; 10. Chronic administration of any medication;

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Microbiome flora4 monthsassessed from stool samples
Microbiome metabolites4 monthsassessed from stool samples
BAT oxidative metabolism4 monthswill be determined using i.v. injection of 11C-acetate during dynamic PET/CT scanning
BAT triglyceride content4 monthswill be determined by radiodensity or MRS

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
metabolites appearance rate12 monthswill be determined by perfusion of stable isotope tracers
BAT blood flow4 monthswill be determined using i.v. injection of 11C-acetate during dynamic PET/CT scanning
hormonal responses12 monthsanalysed by colorimetric and Elisa tests
energy metabolism (whole body production)4 monthsby indirect calorimetry
BAT net glucose uptake4 monthswill be assessed using i.v. injection of 18FDG with sequential dynamic PET/CT scanning.
Whole-body glucose partitioning4 monthswill be assessed using i.v. injection of 18FDG with static PET/CT scanning
BAT volume of metabolic activity4 monthswill be determined using a total body CT (16 mA) followed by a PET acquisition

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 13, 2026