能量补偿之谜。

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 PHYSIOLOGY Physiological and Biochemical Zoology Pub Date : 2021-11-01 DOI:10.1086/716467
Lewis G Halsey
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引用次数: 8

摘要

摘要关于运动如何影响能量消耗的公认观点是,运动越多,一天结束时消耗的卡路里就越多。然而,传统的狩猎采集者过着艰苦的体力生活,他们每天消耗的卡路里并不比生活在节省劳动力环境中的西方人多。事实上,现在有大量关于人类和其他动物的数据表明,长期的生活方式改变,包括增加锻炼或其他体育活动,不会导致每日能量消耗(DEE)的相应增加。这是因为人类和其他动物在有机体水平上表现出一定程度的能量补偿,通过减少在其他生物过程中消耗的能量,改善了由于活动增加而引起的DEE的一些增加。能量补偿是相当可观的,在人类中可以达到数百卡路里。但是,为了实现能量补偿而被长期下调的过程还远不清楚,特别是在人类身上——我们不知道能量补偿是如何实现的。我在这里回顾了有关人类和其他物种的运动干预研究的文献,发现在基础代谢率(BMR)或低水平活动(如坐立不安的游戏)的作用(如果有的话)方面存在冲突,特别是在身体成分变化被排除的情况下。在BMR和低水平活动不是能量补偿的主要组成部分的情况下,是什么驱动了它?我讨论了线粒体效率的变化和BMR昼夜波动的变化如何有助于我们对能量管理的理解。目前尚未探索的是,这些机制和其他机制可能为了解能量补偿是如何实现的奥秘提供重要的见解。
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The Mystery of Energy Compensation.

AbstractThe received wisdom on how activity affects energy expenditure is that the more activity is undertaken, the more calories will have been burned by the end of the day. Yet traditional hunter-gatherers, who lead physically hard lives, burn no more calories each day than Western populations living in labor-saving environments. Indeed, there is now a wealth of data, both for humans and other animals, demonstrating that long-term lifestyle changes involving increases in exercise or other physical activities do not result in commensurate increases in daily energy expenditure (DEE). This is because humans and other animals exhibit a degree of energy compensation at the organismal level, ameliorating some of the increases in DEE that would occur from the increased activity by decreasing the energy expended on other biological processes. And energy compensation can be sizable, reaching many hundreds of calories in humans. But the processes that are downregulated in the long-term to achieve energy compensation are far from clear, particularly in humans-we do not know how energy compensation is achieved. My review here of the literature on relevant exercise intervention studies, for both humans and other species, indicates conflict regarding the role, if any, of basal metabolic rate (BMR) or low-level activity such as fidgeting play, particularly once changes in body composition are factored out. In situations where BMR and low-level activity are not major components of energy compensation, what then drives it? I discuss how changes in mitochondrial efficiency and changes in circadian fluctuations in BMR may contribute to our understanding of energy management. Currently unexplored, these mechanisms and others may provide important insights into the mystery of how energy compensation is achieved.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
62
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology: Ecological and Evolutionary Approaches primarily publishes original research in animal physiology and biochemistry as considered from behavioral, ecological, and/or evolutionary perspectives. Studies at all levels of biological organization from the molecular to the whole organism are welcome, and work that integrates across levels of organization is particularly encouraged. Studies that focus on behavior or morphology are welcome, so long as they include ties to physiology or biochemistry, in addition to having an ecological or evolutionary context. Subdisciplines of interest include nutrition and digestion, salt and water balance, epithelial and membrane transport, gas exchange and transport, acid-base balance, temperature adaptation, energetics, structure and function of macromolecules, chemical coordination and signal transduction, nitrogen metabolism and excretion, locomotion and muscle function, biomechanics, circulation, behavioral, comparative and mechanistic endocrinology, sensory physiology, neural coordination, and ecotoxicology ecoimmunology.
期刊最新文献
IGF-1 Levels Increase during an Immune but Not an Oxidative Challenge in an Avian Model, the Japanese Quail Infection Causes Trade-Offs between Development and Growth in Larval Amphibians. Announcement: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology Is Changing Its Name to Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology. Environmental stress and the morphology of Daphnia pulex The rate of cooling during torpor entry drives torpor patterns in a small marsupial
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