Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)

Puberty—a period when susceptibility to the onset of Type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases—is marked with profound physiological and metabolic changes. In the EarlyBird cohort, children who developed impaired fasting glycemia in adolescence already exhibited higher fasting blood glucose at 5 years of age,...

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Main Authors: Ornella Cominetti, Joanne Hosking, Alison Jeffery, Jonathan Pinkney, Francois-Pierre Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Nutrition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2020.00139/full
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spelling doaj-504bb6503a244476b49cd2b9d5de0a892020-11-25T03:51:34ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Nutrition2296-861X2020-08-01710.3389/fnut.2020.00139557615Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)Ornella Cominetti0Joanne Hosking1Alison Jeffery2Jonathan Pinkney3Francois-Pierre Martin4Nestlé Institute of Food Safety & Analytical Sciences, Nestlé Research, Lausanne, SwitzerlandFaculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Plymouth University, Plymouth, United KingdomFaculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Plymouth University, Plymouth, United KingdomFaculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Plymouth University, Plymouth, United KingdomNestlé Institute of Health Sciences, Nestlé Research, Lausanne, SwitzerlandPuberty—a period when susceptibility to the onset of Type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases—is marked with profound physiological and metabolic changes. In the EarlyBird cohort, children who developed impaired fasting glycemia in adolescence already exhibited higher fasting blood glucose at 5 years of age, independent of their body mass index (BMI), suggesting that pubertal factors may modify existing predisposition. Understanding how the physiological changes during childhood influence glucose homeostasis and how the central energy metabolism may help deciphering the mechanisms that underlie the risk of developing T2D in children and adults. We investigated these associations by analyzing glycemic variations with molecular markers of central energy metabolism, substrate oxidation status and pubertal stages in the EarlyBird cohort. The EarlyBird study is a non-interventional, prospective cohort study, that recruited 307 healthy UK children at age 5, and followed them annually throughout childhood for 12 years. Longitudinal data on blood biochemistry, respiratory exchange ratio, and anthropometry, available from 150 children were integrated with fasting glycemia. The gradual rise in blood glucose during childhood associates with age-dependent changes in molecular processes and substrate oxidation status, namely (i) greater pre-pubertal fat utilization, ketogenesis, and fatty acid oxidation, and (ii) greater pubertal carbohydrate oxidation and glycolytic metabolism (Cori and Cahill Cycles) associated with different amino acid exchanges between muscle and other tissues (proline, glutamine, alanine). Since children's metabolic and nutritional requirements evolve during childhood, this study has potential clinical implications for the development of nutritional strategies for disease prevention in children.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2020.00139/fullamino acidsbiochemistryglucoselongitudinal studyphenotypingsubstrate oxidation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ornella Cominetti
Joanne Hosking
Alison Jeffery
Jonathan Pinkney
Francois-Pierre Martin
spellingShingle Ornella Cominetti
Joanne Hosking
Alison Jeffery
Jonathan Pinkney
Francois-Pierre Martin
Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
Frontiers in Nutrition
amino acids
biochemistry
glucose
longitudinal study
phenotyping
substrate oxidation
author_facet Ornella Cominetti
Joanne Hosking
Alison Jeffery
Jonathan Pinkney
Francois-Pierre Martin
author_sort Ornella Cominetti
title Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
title_short Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
title_full Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
title_fullStr Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
title_full_unstemmed Contributions of Fat and Carbohydrate Metabolism to Glucose Homeostasis in Childhood Change With Age and Puberty: A 12-Years Cohort Study (EARLYBIRD 77)
title_sort contributions of fat and carbohydrate metabolism to glucose homeostasis in childhood change with age and puberty: a 12-years cohort study (earlybird 77)
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Nutrition
issn 2296-861X
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Puberty—a period when susceptibility to the onset of Type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases—is marked with profound physiological and metabolic changes. In the EarlyBird cohort, children who developed impaired fasting glycemia in adolescence already exhibited higher fasting blood glucose at 5 years of age, independent of their body mass index (BMI), suggesting that pubertal factors may modify existing predisposition. Understanding how the physiological changes during childhood influence glucose homeostasis and how the central energy metabolism may help deciphering the mechanisms that underlie the risk of developing T2D in children and adults. We investigated these associations by analyzing glycemic variations with molecular markers of central energy metabolism, substrate oxidation status and pubertal stages in the EarlyBird cohort. The EarlyBird study is a non-interventional, prospective cohort study, that recruited 307 healthy UK children at age 5, and followed them annually throughout childhood for 12 years. Longitudinal data on blood biochemistry, respiratory exchange ratio, and anthropometry, available from 150 children were integrated with fasting glycemia. The gradual rise in blood glucose during childhood associates with age-dependent changes in molecular processes and substrate oxidation status, namely (i) greater pre-pubertal fat utilization, ketogenesis, and fatty acid oxidation, and (ii) greater pubertal carbohydrate oxidation and glycolytic metabolism (Cori and Cahill Cycles) associated with different amino acid exchanges between muscle and other tissues (proline, glutamine, alanine). Since children's metabolic and nutritional requirements evolve during childhood, this study has potential clinical implications for the development of nutritional strategies for disease prevention in children.
topic amino acids
biochemistry
glucose
longitudinal study
phenotyping
substrate oxidation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnut.2020.00139/full
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