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      Not so fast: Paradoxically increased variability in the glucose tolerance test due to food withdrawal in continuous glucose-monitored mice

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          Abstract

          Objective

          This study was performed to determine the effect of fasting on reproducibility of the glucose tolerance test. Due to individual variation in animal feeding behaviors, fasting animals prior to metabolic and behavioral experiments is widely held to reduce inter-subject variation in glucose and metabolic parameters of preclinical rodent models. Reducing variability is especially important for studies where initial metabolite levels can influence the magnitude of experimental interventions, but fasting also imposes stress that may distort the variables of interest. One such intervention is the glucose tolerance test (GTT) which measures the maximum response and recovery following a bolus of exogenous glucose. We sought to investigate how fasting affects the response of individual mice to a GTT.

          Methods

          Using simultaneous continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and indirect calorimetry, we quantified blood glucose, physical activity, body temperature, metabolic rates, and food consumption levels on a minute-to-minute basis in adult male mice for 4 weeks. We tested the effects of a 4-h or 18-h fast on the GTT to examine the effect of food withdrawal in light or dark photoperiods. Studies were also performed with 4-h fasting in additional mice without implanted CGM probes.

          Results

          Contrary to our expectations, a 4-h fast during the light photoperiod promotes a paradoxical increase in inter-animal variation in metabolic rate, physical activity, body temperature, glycemia, and glucose tolerance. This hyperglycemic and hyper-metabolic phenotype promotes increased corticosterone levels and is consistent with a behavioral stress response to food deprivation, even in well-fed mice. We find that mice undergoing an 18-h fast entered torpor, a hibernation-like state. In addition to low body temperature and metabolic rate, torpor is also associated with glucose levels 56 mg/dl lower than those seen in mice with ad libitum access to food. Moreover, the time spent in torpor affects the response to a GTT.

          Conclusion

          Our results suggest fasting mice before glucose tolerance testing, and perhaps other experiments, can have the opposite of the intended effect where fasting can increase, rather than decrease, experimental variability.

          Highlights

          • Ad libitum mice maintain tight control of blood glucose levels.

          • Fasting increases the variation in glucose tolerance testing compared to mice with ad libitum access to food.

          • Fasting mice in the daytime increases glucose levels, metabolic rate, physical activity, and body temperature.

          • Prolonged fasting in the dark photoperiod drives mice into torpor.

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          Most cited references38

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          New methods for calculating metabolic rate with special reference to protein metabolism.

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            Tidy Data

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              imputeTS: Time Series Missing Value Imputation in R

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Mol Metab
                Mol Metab
                Molecular Metabolism
                Elsevier
                2212-8778
                26 August 2023
                November 2023
                26 August 2023
                : 77
                : 101795
                Affiliations
                [1]Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. asbanks@ 123456bidmc.harvard.edu
                [1]

                Equal contributions.

                Article
                S2212-8778(23)00129-1 101795
                10.1016/j.molmet.2023.101795
                10493264
                37640144
                386fa26c-b577-406b-8524-f4bc17c1154f
                © 2023 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 10 May 2023
                : 16 August 2023
                : 23 August 2023
                Categories
                Original Article

                standardization,reproducibility,method development,glucose tolerance test,indirect calorimetry,continuous glucose monitoring

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