Tissues such as skeletal muscle and liver exhibit a high capacity for oxidative disposal of macronutrients. Dietary intake, including factors such as macronutrient composition and caloric intake, can have substantial effects on the delivery and uptake of fuels into tissues and within cells. Additionally, exercise training (through both acute and chronic effects of exertion), can also substantially change the uptake and metabolic partitioning of fuels within skeletal muscle, liver, and other organs. However, it has become clear that the transport of metabolites to tissues, and within cells to mitochondria and intracellular storage depots, is dysfunctional in states of metabolic disease (e.g., diabetes, fatty liver disease) and has serious implications for overall health. Improved knowledge of how nutrition and exercise alter the transport and utilization of metabolic fuels is therefore key to furthering our understanding of the health benefits of these lifestyle factors.
Much is known about the molecular regulation of fuel uptake into cells, such as expression or localization of transport proteins, and knowledge of factors regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and function is growing rapidly. Even in tissues with a high capacity for fuel oxidation, fuel storage is also a critical function and is regulated by various factors, such as perilipin proteins for lipid droplet stabilization, capacity for glycogen synthesis as a factor in glucose storage, and translation initiation as a factor in non-oxidative amino acid use. Vascular health is also important for proper delivery of nutrients and metabolic fuels to tissues. Much is known about the basic biology of these processes. From translational and clinical research, knowledge of diet and exercise prescription to achieve specific health outcomes is also reasonably strong. However, new hypotheses, and additional support for established hypotheses, is needed to link health outcomes to transport and metabolism of nutrients and metabolic fuels. Through this Research Topic, we encourage authors to link basic science knowledge to clinical impacts of diet and exercise, in order to further our understanding of the role of fuel metabolism in the health effects of lifestyle.
We invite original mechanistic research aimed at linking changes in energy substrate transport and metabolism to specific health benefits of diet and exercise. We also invite reviews of the literature in which new hypotheses are proposed describing how specific metabolic changes may leads to health improvements in response to dietary macronutrient composition, energy intake, and exercise. We encourage submissions of the following article types: Original Research, Brief Research Report, Review, Systematic Review, Mini Review, General Commentary, Hypothesis and Theory, and Opinion. Potential topics to address are listed as examples below, and work in related areas will also be considered.
• Lipotoxicity or inflammation as a mechanism underlying changes in insulin sensitivity in response to diet or exercise
• Changes in mitochondrial function in response to positive or negative energy balance
• Changes in resting metabolic rates or substrate selection as a mechanism for improved metabolic health
• Lipid droplet biology and its role in disease susceptibility
• Mechanisms underlying the benefits of lifestyle factors in the prevention or treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
• Metabolic signals driving crosstalk between tissues, such as myokine signals from muscle to brain impacting cognitive health
• Muscle quality and performance as a function of ectopic lipid accumulation within the tissue bed
• Endothelial function as a factor in metabolic fuel delivery
Brian Irving is a co-investigator on a clinical trial 'Surgical Weight-Loss to Improve Functional Status Trajectories Following Total Knee Arthroplasty (SWIFT Trial) (SWIFT)' sponsored by Ethicon-Endosurgery. All other Topic Editors declare no competing interests with regards to the Research Topic subject.
Tissues such as skeletal muscle and liver exhibit a high capacity for oxidative disposal of macronutrients. Dietary intake, including factors such as macronutrient composition and caloric intake, can have substantial effects on the delivery and uptake of fuels into tissues and within cells. Additionally, exercise training (through both acute and chronic effects of exertion), can also substantially change the uptake and metabolic partitioning of fuels within skeletal muscle, liver, and other organs. However, it has become clear that the transport of metabolites to tissues, and within cells to mitochondria and intracellular storage depots, is dysfunctional in states of metabolic disease (e.g., diabetes, fatty liver disease) and has serious implications for overall health. Improved knowledge of how nutrition and exercise alter the transport and utilization of metabolic fuels is therefore key to furthering our understanding of the health benefits of these lifestyle factors.
Much is known about the molecular regulation of fuel uptake into cells, such as expression or localization of transport proteins, and knowledge of factors regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and function is growing rapidly. Even in tissues with a high capacity for fuel oxidation, fuel storage is also a critical function and is regulated by various factors, such as perilipin proteins for lipid droplet stabilization, capacity for glycogen synthesis as a factor in glucose storage, and translation initiation as a factor in non-oxidative amino acid use. Vascular health is also important for proper delivery of nutrients and metabolic fuels to tissues. Much is known about the basic biology of these processes. From translational and clinical research, knowledge of diet and exercise prescription to achieve specific health outcomes is also reasonably strong. However, new hypotheses, and additional support for established hypotheses, is needed to link health outcomes to transport and metabolism of nutrients and metabolic fuels. Through this Research Topic, we encourage authors to link basic science knowledge to clinical impacts of diet and exercise, in order to further our understanding of the role of fuel metabolism in the health effects of lifestyle.
We invite original mechanistic research aimed at linking changes in energy substrate transport and metabolism to specific health benefits of diet and exercise. We also invite reviews of the literature in which new hypotheses are proposed describing how specific metabolic changes may leads to health improvements in response to dietary macronutrient composition, energy intake, and exercise. We encourage submissions of the following article types: Original Research, Brief Research Report, Review, Systematic Review, Mini Review, General Commentary, Hypothesis and Theory, and Opinion. Potential topics to address are listed as examples below, and work in related areas will also be considered.
• Lipotoxicity or inflammation as a mechanism underlying changes in insulin sensitivity in response to diet or exercise
• Changes in mitochondrial function in response to positive or negative energy balance
• Changes in resting metabolic rates or substrate selection as a mechanism for improved metabolic health
• Lipid droplet biology and its role in disease susceptibility
• Mechanisms underlying the benefits of lifestyle factors in the prevention or treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
• Metabolic signals driving crosstalk between tissues, such as myokine signals from muscle to brain impacting cognitive health
• Muscle quality and performance as a function of ectopic lipid accumulation within the tissue bed
• Endothelial function as a factor in metabolic fuel delivery
Brian Irving is a co-investigator on a clinical trial 'Surgical Weight-Loss to Improve Functional Status Trajectories Following Total Knee Arthroplasty (SWIFT Trial) (SWIFT)' sponsored by Ethicon-Endosurgery. All other Topic Editors declare no competing interests with regards to the Research Topic subject.