Support our work
Decorative header background

Time-restricted feeding provides limited microglial immunometabolic improvements in diet-induced obese rats

Research group Kalsbeek
Publication year 2025
Published in Cell Reports
Authors Han Jiao, Jarne Jermei, Xian Liang, Hendrik J P van der Zande, Frank Vrieling, Valentina Sophia Rumanova, Milan Dorscheidt, Anhui Wang, Ewout Foppen, Bob Ignacio, Dirk Jan Stenvers, Tiemin Liu, Kimberly Bonger, Rinke Stienstra, Zhi Zhang, Andries Kalsbeek, Chun-Xia Yi

Time-restricted eating has shown great promise for improving metabolic health in humans with obesity, but its mechanism is still not completely resolved. In this study, we investigated how time-restricted feeding (TRF) affects microglial immunometabolism using Wistar rats. High-fat diet (HFD)-fed animals became obese, but restricting food intake to the active phase reduced fat mass, reinforced the rhythmicity of the microglial transcriptome, and prevented an increase in hypothalamic microglial cell numbers. However, TRF failed to reverse HFD-induced microglial immune dysfunction and metabolic disturbances, including suppressed electron transport chain activity, increased lipid metabolism gene expression, and impaired metabolic flexibility. These findings suggest that obesity-driven microglial immunometabolic reprogramming persists despite TRF-induced weight loss and may contribute to obesogenic memory and weight regain after weight loss induced by dietary interventions.

Support our work!

The Friends Foundation facilitates groundbreaking brain research. You can help us with that.

Support our work