Energy- and food-reward homeostasis are the essential components for maintaining body weight and body composition. Disruption of such homeostasis may lead to metabolic disorders, including obesity, diabetes and cancer( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 – Reference Wolk and Somers 3 ). The organism's ability to coordinate daily patterns of activity, feeding, energy utilisation and energy storage, supported by a synchronised pattern of release of the relevant endocrine components across the daily 24-h cycle, is crucial for energy homeostasis( Reference Bechtold 4 – Reference Garaulet, Ordovas and Madrid 6 ). Circadian alignment implies synchronisation of behavioural and physiological rhythms by the master circadian clock, i.e. the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus. The master clock is connected to peripheral tissues of the body that contain the molecular clock machinery required for local circadian oscillation and rhythmic gene expression( Reference Kohsaka, Laposky and Ramsey 7 , Reference Cagampang and Bruce 8 ). However, metabolic processes are decoupled from the primarily light-driven SCN when food intake is desynchronised from normal diurnal patterns of activity( Reference Bechtold 4 , Reference Laposky, Bass and Kohsaka 5 , Reference Mendoza 9 ), and a dissociation of feeding patterns from SCN-based timing occurs, resulting in changes in energy availability, substrate oxidation, storage and metabolic status( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 , Reference Froy 2 , Reference Kohsaka, Laposky and Ramsey 7 , Reference Esquirol, Bongard and Mabile 10 – Reference Arble, Bass and Laposky 13 ). If feeding becomes the dominant entraining stimulus, adaptation to the changed food-intake patterns occurs, facilitated by an autonomous food-entrainable oscillator that governs behavioural rhythms( Reference Froy 2 , Reference Laposky, Bass and Kohsaka 5 , Reference Kohsaka, Laposky and Ramsey 7 , Reference Cagampang and Bruce 8 , Reference Scheer, Hilton and Mantzoros 11 , Reference Mendoza, Pevet and Challet 12 ). Moreover, core circadian clock genes involved in reciprocal transcriptional feedback with genetic regulators of metabolism, and directly responsive to cellular energy supply, are involved( Reference Kohsaka, Laposky and Ramsey 7 , Reference Cagampang and Bruce 8 ). In addition, the reward and motivational value of food is a potent synchroniser for the SCN clock( Reference Kok, Roelfsema and Frolich 14 ). This suggests that energy metabolism and motivational properties of food can influence the clock mechanism of the SCN. Food-related cues may entrain clock genes of the SCN directly or indirectly, and play an integral role as a food-entrainable oscillator, responsible for anticipation of meal-time( Reference Cagampang and Bruce 8 ). This close interaction is likely to be critical for normal circadian regulation of metabolism, and may underlie the disruption of proper metabolic rhythms observed in metabolic disorders, such as obesity and type-II diabetes( Reference Bechtold 4 , Reference Esquirol, Bongard and Mabile 10 , Reference Schibler, Ripperger and Brown 15 – Reference Szosland 19 ).
This review deals with effects of disruption of sleep and quality sleep (QS), and with effects of circadian misalignment on energy- and food-reward homeostasis, endocrinological factors, body weight and body composition. Before considering these topics in adults, the development of sleeping hours and body weight during puberty, and the consequences, will be addressed.
Development of sleep duration and body weight during puberty
During puberty, sex differences in anthropometric and endocrine variables are observed in the transition from Tanner stages 1–5( Reference Rutters, Gerver and Nieuwenhuizen 20 – Reference Lumeng, Somashekar and Appugliese 23 ). Puberty is initiated through pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone release from the hypothalamus and activation of the gonadal axis( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 , Reference DiVall and Radovick 24 , Reference Lewis and Lee 25 ). The subsequent development of secondary sex characteristics originates from shared neuronal systems, with the hypothalamus as integration point( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 ). The hypothalamus regulates the sleep–wake and feeding circuits( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 , Reference Vanitallie 26 ). Circuits are connected through the hypocretin-1 hormone that regulates feeding and locomotor activity via the nucleus accumbens, as well as signal transduction on the light–dark cycle to the SCN. Changes in hypothalamic functioning, such as disturbed hypocretin-1 signalling, are associated with disturbance of the circadian cycle and feeding behaviour, affecting energy balance and body composition( Reference Adamantidis and de Lecea 1 , Reference Vanitallie 26 ). Furthermore, during puberty a significant reduction in sleep duration occurs( Reference Rutters, Gerver and Nieuwenhuizen 20 – Reference Lumeng, Somashekar and Appugliese 23 ), and pubertal status appears to be inversely associated with sleep duration( Reference Rutters, Gerver and Nieuwenhuizen 20 – Reference Lumeng, Somashekar and Appugliese 23 ). Moreover, studies report a consistent inverse association between habitual sleep duration and body-weight development( Reference Knutson 21 – Reference Lumeng, Somashekar and Appugliese 23 ), independent of BMI at the start of puberty, fat mass and obesity-associated allele genotype (rs9939609), parent BMI, as well as changes in physical activity and hours of television viewing. Therefore, the changes in hypothalamic functioning during puberty may explain the relationships between the changes in BMI and in sleep duration during puberty. Since these developments occur in parallel, cause and effect cannot be distinguished.
Sleep and metabolic disorders in children and adolescents
Sleep, and sleep architecture are important factors for normal growth and development during childhood( Reference Mesarwi, Polak and Jun 27 – Reference Matricciani, Blunden and Rigney 32 ). Especially total sleeping time and QS ((slow wave sleep (SWS) + rapid eye movement sleep (REM))/total sleeping time) are crucial sleep factors associated with outcomes on physical, cognitive, emotional and social development in children( Reference Van Cauter 30 ). Sleep deprivation and poor QS have been identified as an independent risk factor for the development of insulin resistance (IR)( Reference Mesarwi, Polak and Jun 27 – Reference Van Cauter 30 ). Studies on sleep in relation to IR in adolescents( Reference Javaheri, Storfer-Isser and Rosen 33 – Reference Matthews, Dahl and Owens 35 ) show for instance that acute sleep restriction reduced insulin sensitivity in adolescent boys( Reference Klingenberg, Chaput and Holmback 34 ). Observations on sleep duration in healthy black and white adolescents show an inverse association between sleep duration and homeostasis model assessment of IR (HOMA-IR). Interventions to extend sleep duration may reduce diabetes and obesity risk in youth( Reference Matthews, Dahl and Owens 35 ). A cross-sectional analysis from two examinations conducted in the Cleveland Children's Sleep and Health Cohort (n 387; 43 % minorities) shows a quadratic U-shape association between sleep duration and HOMA-IR. When adjusted for age, sex, race, preterm status and activity, adolescents who slept 7·75 h had the lowest predicted HOMA-IR, while adolescents who slept 5·0 or 10·5 h had HOMA-IR indices that were approximately 20 % higher. It was concluded that shorter and longer sleep durations are associated with decreased insulin sensitivity in adolescents( Reference Javaheri, Storfer-Isser and Rosen 33 ). Another lifestyle factor, namely physical activity, second for improving insulin sensitivity, may act directly as well as indirectly by its effects on sleep characteristics. With regard to food intake, studies have found associations between sleep deprivation and food choices( Reference Klingenberg, Chaput and Holmback 34 – Reference Wells and Cruess 39 ). Sleep-deprived individuals appear more prone to choose unhealthy foods high in energy and fat content( Reference Klingenberg, Chaput and Holmback 34 – Reference Wells and Cruess 39 ). Also, sleep-deprived individuals are reported to have more frequent meals or snacks between meals compared with individuals who had sufficient sleep( Reference Hicks, McTighe and Juarez 36 ). It has been assumed that sleep deprivation is associated with decreased leptin concentrations and increased ghrelin concentrations, thereby promoting the feeling of hunger and suppressing satiety( Reference Leproult, Copinschi and Buxton 40 , Reference St-Onge, O'Keeffe and Roberts 41 ). A reduced sleep duration, reduced quality of sleep and REM sleep, or fragmented sleep enhance a positive energy balance through altered substrate oxidation, hormone concentrations, sleeping metabolic rate, appetitive behaviours and stress( Reference Gonnissen, Hulshof and Westerterp-Plantenga 42 ). Circadian misalignment affects sleep architecture and the glucose–insulin metabolism, substrate oxidation, the HOMA-IR index, leptin concentrations and hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA)-axis activity( Reference Gonnissen, Hulshof and Westerterp-Plantenga 42 – Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ).
Sleep disruption, body weight and metabolic disorders in adults
Sleep and metabolism
Sleep and circadian rhythms have direct impacts on energy metabolism, and represent important mechanisms underlying the major health epidemics of obesity and diabetes( Reference Wolk and Somers 3 , Reference Laposky, Bass and Kohsaka 5 ). The majority of studies are observational in nature, and a few intervention studies have been reported. For instance, after partial sleep deprivation increased food intake and increased intake of energy from snacks with a higher carbohydrate or fat content has been shown( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 – Reference St-Onge, Roberts and Chen 49 ), and in short sleepers, increased respiratory quotient, implying increase in carbohydrate oxidation was observed( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 50 ). Sleep deprivation may affect energy balance through hormone changes( Reference Leproult, Copinschi and Buxton 40 , Reference Taheri, Lin and Austin 51 – Reference Omisade, Buxton and Rusak 53 ), although this was not observed in all studies( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 , Reference Schmid, Hallschmid and Jauch-Chara 54 – Reference Morselli, Leproult and Balbo 56 ).
In addition to reduced sleep, reduced QS is associated with metabolic disorders. Reduced QS obtained by a single night of fragmented sleep without reducing total sleeping time, induced a shift in insulin concentrations, from being lower in the morning and higher in the afternoon, while glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) concentrations and fullness scores were decreased. The decreased GLP-1 concentrations and fullness scores in the afternoon were synchronously related with reduced Visual Analogue Scale fullness scores, and increased Visual Analogue Scale desire to eat scores after dinner. This may lead to increased food intake and snacking, thus contributing to a positive energy balance( Reference Gonnissen, Hursel and Rutters 43 ). Also an increased respiratory quotient was observed when sleep was fragmented( Reference Hursel, Rutters and Gonnissen 57 ). Reduced QS affects several neuroendocrine signals involved in the control of substrate utilisation, including cortisol concentrations. The sharp morning rise and the steep fall to lower evening levels are modulated by even a single night of reduced sleep( Reference Leproult, Copinschi and Buxton 40 , Reference Omisade, Buxton and Rusak 53 ). After a single night of reduced QS, cortisol levels were significantly reduced after awakening and were elevated in the evening( Reference Leproult, Copinschi and Buxton 40 , Reference Gonnissen, Hursel and Rutters 43 , Reference Omisade, Buxton and Rusak 53 ). Taken together, a reduced sleep-duration, and reduced QS affect substrate oxidation, leptin- and ghrelin concentrations, sleeping metabolic rate, appetite, food reward, HPA-axis activity, gut-peptide concentrations as such, that a positive energy balance is enhanced, which increases the risk for overweight.
Sleep and body-weight management
Effects of changes in sleep duration during a dietary intervention for body-weight loss was assessed by Nedeltcheva et al.( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 , Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 50 ). They showed that sleep restriction to 5·5 h sleep compared with 8·5 h sleep compromised the efficacy of a dietary intervention for weight loss. The combination of energy and sleep restriction in overweight adults resulted in decreased loss of fat and considerably increased loss of fat-free body mass. These results suggest that sleep plays a role in the preservation of human fat-free body mass during periods of reduced energy intake( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 , Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 50 ). The effect on sparing fat-free mass was confirmed by Verhoef et al.( Reference Verhoef, Camps and Gonnissen 58 ) who assessed whether during a weight-loss weight-maintenance programme in overweight subjects, a possible increase in sleep duration would precede the diet-induced decreases in body weight. They observed a concomitant inverse correlation between changes in sleep duration and in body weight, and respectively fat mass.
In addition, Chaput et al.( Reference Chaput, Despres and Bouchard 59 ) observed that short-duration sleepers who maintained their short sleep duration habits experienced a greater increase in BMI and fat mass over a 6-year follow-up period compared with short-duration sleepers who increased their sleep duration, suggesting that shifting sleep duration from a short length to a healthier length is associated with lower adiposity gain( Reference Chaput, Despres and Bouchard 59 ). Moreover, they showed that both sleep duration and sleep quality were significantly related to fat mass loss during dietary interventions in overweight and obese adults( Reference Chaput and Tremblay 60 ). Despite these significant correlations it is not possible to determine any direction of causation.
Circadian alignment and energy balance
The significance of circadian alignment and energy balance implies assessment of the significance of circadian alignment for sleep, and sleep architecture, food-intake regulation, and physical activity. This is mainly assessed by circadian misalignment experiments. In the following sections, effects of circadian misalignment on sleep architecture and food-intake regulation are considered. In addition the significance of physical activity for circadian alignment will be highlighted.
Circadian misalignment and sleep
Circadian misalignment may reduce total sleep time, but mainly affects sleep architecture. The circadian phase at which sleep occurs affects the distribution of sleep stages. The preferential distribution of REM sleep towards the latter part of the night is linked to a circadian oscillator, while the preferential distribution of SWS towards the beginning of a sleep episode is mediated by homeostatic processes, i.e. the length of prior wakefulness( Reference Carskadon, Dement, Roth and Dement 61 ). Circadian misalignment resulted in disruption of the normal phase relationship between SWS and REM sleep, so that REM sleep is relatively phase advanced to SWS( Reference Gonnissen, Mazuy and Rutters 44 ). This abnormal circadian sequencing results in shortening of REM sleep latency and increasing REM sleep duration in a phase advanced stage. This short latency to REM sleep is typical of narcoleptic and depressive patients( Reference Lee, Swanson and de la Iglesia 62 ). Mood disorders, especially unipolar depression and seasonal affective disorder, have been linked to circadian rhythm abnormalities( Reference Lee, Swanson and de la Iglesia 62 ). Dysregulation in the HPA-axis, implying an overall increased cortisol secretion with a phase advance of the cortisol circadian rhythm is extremely frequent in individuals with depression( Reference Monteleone and Maj 63 , Reference Van Cauter, Leproult and Plat 64 ). Misalignment between timing of the clock and the timing of sleep, in either direction, has been associated with depression in vulnerable individuals( Reference Emens, Lewy and Kinzie 65 ).
Increased REM sleep during both a phase advance and a phase delay is not favourable( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 , Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 50 , Reference Peterson and Benca 66 – Reference Brass and Auerbach 72 ), because this results in a relatively shorter REM sleep duration during the second part of the night, associated with higher cortisol concentrations, higher fasting insulin concentrations, and a higher HOMA-IR index( Reference Gonnissen, Mazuy and Rutters 44 , Reference Van Cauter, Leproult and Plat 64 , Reference Knutson, Van Cauter and Zee 73 , Reference Wu, Stone and Hsi 74 ). Sleep during the circadian nadir (03.00–06.00 hours), is important in protecting normal physiological rhythms and function of the HPA-axis( Reference Wu, Stone and Hsi 74 ). Circadian misalignment, both a phase advance and a phase delay results in dysregulation of the HPA-axis. All in all, circadian misalignment appears to affect sleep-architecture, namely the distribution of sleep stages. REM sleep then becomes phase advanced to SWS with reduced REM sleep latency. REM sleep duration increases during phase advance, and during phase delay, resulting in a shorter REM sleep duration during the second part of the night.
Circadian misalignment, endocrinology, energy homeostasis and meal patterns
The daily patterns of feeding, energy utilisation, and energy storage across the daily 24-h cycle, is based upon a neuro-endocrinological system( Reference Koren, Levitt Katz and Brar 75 , Reference Huang, Ramsey and Marcheva 76 ). Metabolically relevant hormones show circadian oscillation with different daily patterns. Cortisol secretion has a circadian rhythm with the nadir during the early biological night (i.e. a time according to the original circadian rhythm associated with the start of behavioural inactivity) and the peak in the biological morning (i.e. a time according to the circadian rhythm associated with the start of behavioural activity)( Reference Czeisler and Klerman 77 ). Glucose and insulin levels peak during the late biological night( Reference Kalsbeek and Strubbe 78 , Reference Morgan, Hampton and Gibbs 79 ). Leptin, which suppresses appetite, is secreted in a circadian manner( Reference van Aggel-Leijssen, van Baak and Tenenbaum 80 – Reference Wong, Licinio and Yildiz 83 ). In human subjects, night-time plasma leptin levels are high when appetite decreases, favouring fasting and nocturnal rest, and low during the day, when hunger increases. Gastric leptin levels oscillate in a circadian manner where leptin levels are high at night but low during the day( Reference Cinti, Matteis and Pico 84 – Reference Cinti, de Matteis and Ceresi 86 ).
Ghrelin, which is produced in the stomach, pancreas and hypothalamus( Reference Kojima and Kangawa 87 , Reference Cowley, Smith and Diano 88 ), is involved in stimulating appetite via its action on neuropeptide Y in the lateral hypothalamus( Reference Chen, Trumbauer and Chen 89 , Reference Hagemann, Meier and Gallwitz 90 ) and can also alter clock function in the SCN in vitro ( Reference Yi, Challet and Pevet 91 , Reference Yannielli, Molyneux and Harrington 92 ). Ghrelin oscillates with feeding( Reference Cummings, Purnell and Frayo 93 ), making this peptide a putative candidate for food-related entraining signals. In addition, elevated levels of ghrelin were found during the early part of the night in sleeping subjects, decreasing in the morning before awakening( Reference Cummings, Purnell and Frayo 93 ). Sleep deprivation can increase circulating ghrelin levels and this is accompanied by heightened hunger sensation( Reference Schmid, Hallschmid and Jauch-Chara 54 ). Thus, ghrelin may be a signal involved in the cross-talk between the peripheral and central circadian clock system.
In parallel to the circadian changes in neuropeptide levels and humoral signals from peripheral tissues, a circadian rhythm in macronutrient selection occurs. In human subjects, a carbohydrate-rich diet is favoured during breakfast and high-fat diets are preferred during evening meals( Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Miedema and Wijckmans-Duijsens 94 ). Carbohydrates are metabolised better during breakfast because, also in relation to the glucostatic theory, then the body metabolically responds more readily to a glucose stimulus, since the fasting glucose level then is relatively stable, and very clearly indicates the first transient glucose decline( Reference Dos Santos, Aragon and Padovani 95 ).
Disruption of the circadian system affects metabolic and cardiovascular changes( Reference Froy 2 , Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 , Reference Fletcher 96 – Reference DeSantis, DiezRoux and Hajat 98 ). In relation to appetite, release of some endocrine products shifts with meal patterns, such as glucose, insulin, GLP-1, ghrelin and leptin concentrations. Independently, disruption of the circadian system was associated with a significantly increased insulin response( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ), possibly related to hyperglycaemia associated with a progressing IR associated with sleep restriction, and to increased sympathetic nervous system activity( Reference Fletcher 96 ). Changes in the magnitudes of glucose and insulin responses indicate a disturbed glucose and insulin metabolism( Reference Cinti, de Matteis and Ceresi 86 , Reference Ribeiro, Hampton and Morgan 97 ) and decreased GLP-1 concentrations indicate decreased satiety( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ).
Cortisol levels do not show a meal-related pattern during misalignment. During circadian misalignment the cortisol curve is flattened compared to 24-h cycles( Reference Scheer, Hilton and Mantzoros 11 , Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ). In addition, with sleep loss, cortisol may exert its deleterious metabolic effects through remaining high night-time concentrations, which are associated with IR, suppressed immunity and increased inflammation( Reference DeSantis, DiezRoux and Hajat 98 ).
Moreover, circadian disruption results in increased carbohydrate oxidation( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ), probably due to both hyperinsulinaemia and hyperglycaemia( Reference Yki-Jarvinen, Bogardus and Howard 99 ). Often the increased carbohydrate oxidation occurs at the cost of protein oxidation, while fat oxidation remains constant( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ).
The main effect of circadian misalignment, either phase advanced or phase delayed, is a concomitant disturbance of the glucose–insulin metabolism and substrate-oxidation. Chronically eating and sleeping at unusual circadian times may create a health risk through metabolic disturbance( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ).
Consequently, meals need to be aligned in a circadian fashion. This requires timing and regularity of meals, with respect to food selection, meal frequency, meal intervals and meal size( Reference Mendoza 9 , Reference Esquirol, Bongard and Mabile 10 , Reference Huang, Ramsey and Marcheva 76 ). Beneficial metabolic effects of regular meal frequency on dietary thermogenesis, insulin sensitivity and fasting lipid profiles in healthy obese women align with effects of regular circadian patterns( Reference Gonnissen, Hulshof and Westerterp-Plantenga 42 ). After a regular v. an irregular meal pattern energy intake was lower, postprandial thermogenesis higher, and fasting total and LDL-cholesterol was lower( Reference Farshchi, Taylor and Macdonald 100 ). Peak insulin concentrations and area under the curve of insulin responses to the test meal were lower( Reference Farshchi, Taylor and Macdonald 100 ). Regular meal frequency creates more appropriate insulin sensitivity and lipid profiles compared with irregular meal frequency in healthy lean women( Reference Farshchi, Taylor and Macdonald 101 ), and irregular meal frequency led to a lower postprandial energy expenditure compared with the regular meal frequency, while the mean energy intake was not significantly different between the two( Reference Farshchi, Taylor and Macdonald 102 ). The reduced diet-induced thermogenesis with the irregular meal frequency may lead to weight gain in the long term( Reference Farshchi, Taylor and Macdonald 102 ). With a regular meal frequency glucose excursions are blunted, net insulin production is reduced, and LDL-cholesterol concentrations tend to be lowered, mainly due to gastric emptying slowing down, and insulin production being reduced( Reference Arnold, Ball and Duncan 103 – Reference Jones, Leitch and Pederson 111 ). The net result is that lipid oxidation is favoured at the expense of glucose oxidation and lipid storage, and cholesterol synthesis is reduced. This may reduce adiposity and the level of circulating fatty acids, thereby leading to systematic, adaptive changes in both lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. Also examples of long-term responses to a sustained regular meal frequency such as improved glucose tolerance, and moderately reduced fasting plasma total and LDL-cholesterol, and a higher HDL:LDL cholesterol ratio are observed in normolipidaemic free-living subjects, as well as in type-II diabetes patients( Reference Arnold, Ball and Duncan 103 – Reference Jones, Leitch and Pederson 111 ). Also for cholesterol synthesis, meal frequency-dependent control of cholesterogenesis appeared to be mediated via hormonal mechanisms( Reference Ribeiro, Hampton and Morgan 97 ).
Furthermore, circadian alignment including careful and fixed timing of food intake and meal frequency plays a role in substrate utilisation and in energy expenditure. Large metabolic fluctuations in carbohydrate and fat oxidation were shown in a gorging food-intake pattern, while in the nibbling pattern, carbohydrate and fat oxidation remained relatively constant during the active hours of the day( Reference Verboeket-van de Venne and Westerterp 112 ). Also, the diet-induced thermogenic response was related to meal frequency( Reference Verboeket-van de Venne, Westerterp and Kester 113 ). In a series of experimental studies, variation in energy intake was primarily explained by habitual meal frequency, macronutrient composition and number of blood glucose declines( Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Kovacs and Melanson 114 ). The variation in habitual meal frequency was explained by percentage energy from carbohydrate or from fat in the diet, while the protein in the diet attenuates the metabolic amplitudes( Reference Garrow, Durrant and Blaza 115 , Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Nieuwenhuizen and Tome 116 ). Moreover the effect of protein intake on satiety is partly due to the optimal timing of protein intake( Reference Garrow, Durrant and Blaza 115 , Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Nieuwenhuizen and Tome 116 ). In healthy young men, habitual meal frequency appeared to be of greater significance in energy-intake regulation than forced meal frequency( Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Goris and Meijer 117 – Reference Melanson, Westerterp-Plantenga and Campfield 120 ). Adiposity may increase when young lean male subjects switch from a four- to a three-meal pattern by removing their usual afternoon meal, partly mediated by a change in the macronutrient composition of the diet( Reference Chapelot, Marmonier and Aubert 121 ). Assessment of the effect of omitting or adding the third meal, revealing that eating three meals compared with two meals had no effects on 24 h energy expenditure, diet-induced thermogenesis, activity-induced energy expenditure and sleeping metabolic rate. However, eating the same amount of energy divided over three meals compared with over two meals, did increase satiety, particularly during the day, and did increase fat oxidation, particularly during the night in healthy, normal-weight women( Reference Smeets and Westerterp-Plantenga 122 ).
Circadian alignment and physical activity
To include circadian rhythm in the assessment of circadian alignment and physical activity, wrist skin temperature has been used as a valid method of assessing circadian rhythms in human subjects( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). As a measure for circadianity, circadian temperature amplitude and stability have been used as variables. Tranel et al.( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ) identified physiological and behavioural measures that were significantly associated with the circadianity of these temperature parameters. Moreover, they tested the hypothesis that circadian temperature amplitude and stability would significantly differ among groups of healthy young men of varying adiposities( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). Wrist skin temperatures taken at 10 min intervals for seven consecutive days were determined in eighteen optimal, twenty fair and twenty-one poor % body fat grouped young men and subsequently analysed using available validated software. Body composition, cardiorespiratory fitness, actigraphy, daily nutritional and sleep data, and fasting lipid, insulin and glucose concentration measures were also determined( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). Subjects with one or more health problems had significantly lower temperature amplitude and stability( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). This occurred in subjects with a single metabolic syndrome risk factor compared to those with no metabolic syndrome risk factors, and in subjects with a poor % body fat( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). In addition, stepwise multivariate regression analyses showed that 50 % of the variance in temperature amplitude was explained by actigraphy (mean steps taken per day), cardiorespiratory fitness, and late night eating per week; and 57 % in temperature stability by mean steps taken per day, time spent in moderate-to-vigorous activity per day, fat mass, and late night eating per week( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ). Physical activity was the most important measure associated with the differences in circadian rhythm parameters( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ).
Genetic background for the amplitude and stability of circadian rhythm
In order to shed light on the genetic component of the circadian marker described above, relative genetic and environmental influences on wrist temperature (WT) was determined using classical twin models( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). A study was performed in fifty-three pairs of female twins (twenty-eight monozygotic and twenty-five dizygotic), with a BMI 25·9 (sd 3·78) and mean age 52 (sd 6) years. The sample was selected from the Murcia Twin Register. Circadian patterns were studied by analysing WT during one week every 10 min using Circadianware® ( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). Genetic influences on WT variability were estimated by comparing correlations of monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs and fitting genetic structural equation models to measured variables( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). Monozygotic twins showed higher intra-pair correlations than dizygotic twins for most of the parameters. Genetic factors were responsible for between 46 and 70 % of variance (broad sense heritability) in parameters such as mean temperature, mesor, acrophase, Rayleigh test, percentage of rhythmicity and 5 h of maximum temperature( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). The pattern of correlations and the genetic models point to moderate-to-high heritability for most of the WT parameters, suggesting a relevant genetic influence. The presence of these genetic factors points to endogenicity as the main cause of the coincidence of the WT rhythms( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). However, some WT parameters are still dependent on environment to a relevant extent and, hence, more amenable to change through external interventions( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ).
Discussion
Circadian alignment is crucial for body-weight management, and for metabolic health. In this context, circadian alignment consists of alignment of sleep, meal patterns and physical activity. Research on these topics mainly consists of research on misalignment. For instance, circadian misalignment appears to affect sleep-architecture in that REM sleep becomes phase advanced to SWS with reduced REM sleep latency. REM sleep duration increases during phase delay, resulting in a shorter REM sleep duration during the second part of the night. When sleep architecture is affected by circadian misalignment, it affects substrate oxidation, leptin- and ghrelin concentrations, appetite, food reward, HPA-axis activity and gut-peptide concentrations as such, that a positive energy balance is enhanced. Phase-advanced misalignment leads to increased night-time cortisol exposure, increased HOMA-IR index, increased carbohydrate- and decreased protein-oxidation, as well as to food-reward deficiency( Reference Gonnissen, Hulshof and Westerterp-Plantenga 42 , Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ). Phase-delayed misalignment increases REM sleep, glucose concentrations and carbohydrate oxidation, and decreased GLP-1 concentrations and protein-oxidation( Reference Gonnissen, Hulshof and Westerterp-Plantenga 42 , Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ). The main effect of circadian misalignment, either phase advanced or phase delayed, is a concomitant disturbance of the glucose–insulin metabolism and substrate-oxidation. Chronically eating and sleeping at unusual circadian times may create a health risk through metabolic disturbance( Reference Gonnissen, Rutters and Mazuy 45 ).
Since the relationship between circadian alignment and energy homeostasis appears in that daily patterns in activity, feeding, energy utilisation and energy storage are strongly synchronised by the SCN( Reference Bechtold 4 , Reference Laposky, Bass and Kohsaka 5 ), and since the SCN clock is entrained by light–dark cycles as well as by daily feeding cycles, this close interaction is critical for circadian regulation of metabolism, and partly underlies the disruption of proper metabolic rhythms observed in metabolic disorders, such as obesity and type-II diabetes( Reference Bechtold 4 , Reference Esquirol, Bongard and Mabile 10 ). Aligning meals in a circadian way requires timing of food intake, including regularity of meals, i.e. of meal frequency and meal intervals( Reference Mendoza 9 , Reference Esquirol, Bongard and Mabile 10 , Reference Huang, Ramsey and Marcheva 76 ). Over the longer term, in the perspective of dietary intervention for body-weight loss, the combination of energy and sleep restriction in overweight adults resulted in decreased loss of fat and considerably increased loss of fat-free body mass( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 , Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 50 ). Moreover, a concomitant inverse correlation between changes in sleep duration and in body-weight, and respectively fat mass was shown, during weight maintenance, showing a concomitant improvement of body-composition and sleep duration( Reference Verhoef, Camps and Gonnissen 58 , Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Goris and Meijer 117 ).
The surprisingly strong effect of regular physical activity during the day on the stability and amplitude of circadian rhythm( Reference Tranel, Schroder and England 123 ), may serve as an instrument to restore poor circadian rhythms. We suggest that primarily regular physical activity throughout and during the day stimulates the amplitude and stability of the circadian rhythm, which will be enhanced by a regular sleep pattern with sufficient sleep duration, taking into account the sleep hygiene( Reference Nedeltcheva, Kilkus and Imperial 46 ), and a fixed and regular meal pattern. These environmental variables that support a stable circadian rhythm, likely operate in interaction with a genetic predisposition, suggested by a moderate-to-high heritability for most of the WT parameters indicating circadian rhythm( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). Endogenicity may be the main cause of the coincidence of the WT rhythms( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ). However, the dependence of these WT parameters on environment make them amenable to change through external interventions( Reference Lopez-Minguez, Ordoñana and Sánchez-Romera 124 ).
In conclusion, notwithstanding the separate favourable effects of sufficient daily physical activity, regular meal patterns, sufficient sleep duration and QS on energy-balance, the overall effect of the amplitude and stability of the circadian rhythm, perhaps including genetic predisposition, may integrate the separate effects in an additive way.
Acknowledgements
Many thanks to my colleagues Dr Hanne Gonnissen, Dr Eveline Martens, Dr Claire Mazuy, Dr Rick Hursel, Dr Sanne Verhoef, Dr Femke Rutters, and Dr Tanja Adam, for collaboration on the topics in this field. The technicians Loek Wouters and Paul Schoffelen are thankfully acknowledged.
Financial Support
None.
Conflicts of Interest
None.
Authorship
The paper was written solely by M. S. W-P.