Open access · OA
via OpenAlex
Nutrition and the circadian system
Gregory D. Potter, Janet Cade, Peter J. Grant, Laura J. Hardie
British Journal Of Nutrition · 2016 · ▲ 218 citations
Abstract
The human circadian system anticipates and adapts to daily environmental changes to optimise behaviour according to time of day and temporally partitions incompatible physiological processes. At the helm of this system is a master clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) of the anterior hypothalamus. The SCN are primarily synchronised to the 24-h day by the light/dark cycle; however, feeding/fasting cycles are the primary time cues for clocks in peripheral tissues. Aligning feeding/fasting cycles with clock-regulated metabolic changes optimises metabolism, and studies of other animals suggest that feeding at inappropriate times disrupts circadian system organisation, and thereby contributes to adverse metabolic consequences and chronic disease development. 'High-fat diets' (HFD) produce particularly deleterious effects on circadian system organisation in rodents by blunting feeding/fasting cycles. Time-of-day-restricted feeding, where food availability is restricted to a period of several hours, offsets many adverse consequences of HFD in these animals; however, further evidence is required to assess whether the same is true in humans. Several nutritional compounds have robust effects on the circadian system. Caffeine, for example, can speed synchronisation to new time zones after jetlag. An appreciation of the circadian system has many implications for nutritional science and may ultimately help reduce the burden of chronic diseases.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1017/s0007114516002117
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-16 MST
Cite this
APA
Potter, G.D., Cade, J., Grant, P.J., & Hardie, L.J. (2016). Nutrition and the circadian system. <em>British Journal Of Nutrition</em>. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007114516002117
Vancouver
Potter GD, Cade J, Grant PJ, Hardie LJ. Nutrition and the circadian system. British Journal Of Nutrition. 2016. doi:10.1017/s0007114516002117.
BibTeX
@article{gregory2016Nutrit,
title = {Nutrition and the circadian system},
author = {Gregory D. Potter and Janet Cade and Peter J. Grant and Laura J. Hardie},
journal = {British Journal Of Nutrition},
year = {2016},
doi = {10.1017/s0007114516002117},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Nutrients 2021
Open access · CC-BY
Beneficial Effects of Early Time-Restricted Feeding on Metabolic Diseases: Importance of Aligning Food Habits with the Circadian Clock
Endocrine Reviews 2021
Open access · OA
Time-restricted Eating for the Prevention and Management of Metabolic Diseases
Nature and Science of Sleep 2018
Open access · CC-BY
How does diurnal intermittent fasting impact sleep, daytime sleepiness, and markers of the biological clock? Current insights
Journal of Translational Medicine 2016
Open access · CC-BY
Effects of eight weeks of time-restricted feeding (16/8) on basal metabolism, maximal strength, body composition, inflammation, and cardiovascular risk factors in resistance-trained males
Preprints.org 2021
Preprint · CC-BY
The Effects of Intermittent Fasting on Brain and Cognitive Function
Nutrients 2019
Open access · CC-BY