Publication

Duivenvoorde L.P., van Schothorst E.M., Swarts H.J., Keijer J.

J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2015;70(3):282-93.

Human and Animal Physiology, Wageningen University, The Netherlands.

Abstract

Indirect calorimetry (InCa) can potentially be used to noninvasively assess metabolic and age-related flexibility. To assess the use of InCa for this purpose, we tested the sensitivity and response stability over time of three InCa-based treatments in old versus adult mice. Diurnal patterns of respiratory exchange ratio were followed for 24 hours under standard conditions (Treatment 1), but the results were not stable between test periods. As a challenge, fasted mice received glucose to test switch-effectiveness from fat to glucose oxidation (Treatment 2). No differences between groups were observed, although old mice showed higher adiposity and lower white adipose tissue (WAT) mitochondrial density, indicative of age-impaired metabolic health. Lastly, adaptation to a challenge of oxygen restriction (OxR, 14.5% O2) was assessed as a novel approach (Treatment 3). This treatment stably detected significant differences: old mice did not maintain reduced oxygen consumption under OxR during both test periods, whereas adult mice did. Further biochemical and gene expression analyses showed that OxR affected glucose and lactate homeostasis in liver and WAT of adult mice, supporting the observed differences in oxygen consumption. In conclusion, InCa analysis of the response to OxR in mice is a sensitive and reproducible treatment to noninvasively measure age-impaired metabolic health.

KEYWORDS: Challenge test, Hypoxia, Indirect calorimetry, Metabolic flexibility, Mice.

doi: 10.1093/gerona/glu027.

 



 

Event date: 10/03/2014

Publication date: Wed Apr 30 18:14:00 CEST 2014

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