How do circadian clock gene changes translate to improved glycemic control and appetite regulation?

OPEN

While the study demonstrates both circadian gene upregulation and metabolic improvements, the causal relationship and intermediate molecular pathways connecting circadian clock function to glucose homeostasis and appetite control are not established. This gap limits understanding of how circadian interventions could treat metabolic diseases. Gap type: unexplained_observation Source paper: Glycaemic, appetite and circadian benefits of a dairy-enriched diet with high-protein breakfast and early daytime-restricted carbohydrate intake in type 2 diabetes: a randomised crossover trial. (2026, Diabetologia, PMID:41578008)

Priority: 0.79 Domain: metabolic-neuroscience Hypotheses: 0
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Landscape Summary: How do circadian clock gene changes translate to improved glycemic control and appetite regulation? is a 0.79 priority gap in metabolic-neuroscience. It has 0 linked hypotheses with average composite score 0.000. Status: open.

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Key Researchers

Colonna, Sevlever, et al. (TREM2 biology)

Clinical Trials

How do circadian clock gene changes translate to improved glycemic control and appetite regulation? — INVOKE-2 (completed)

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