B01

Circadian rhythms and chronotherapy in multiple sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis features disturbances in sleep, metabolism, and immune activity across the circadian cycle, which may actively contribute to disease activity. This project investigates how these rhythms influence disease progression and whether strengthening them can be therapeutically beneficial.

Problem

The circadian organization of immune and metabolic rhythms in multiple sclerosis and their relevance for disease progression are insufficiently characterized.

Concept

Reinforcing circadian regulation of immune and metabolic pathways can mitigate disease-related dysfunction in multiple sclerosis.

Aim

We will map circadian immune and metabolic rhythms and test time-restricted eating as a chronotherapeutic intervention.

The team for

B01

The publications of

B01

Targeting

Intended isocaloric time-restricted eating shifts circadian clocks but does not improve cardiometabolic health in women with overweight

October 29, 2025

Time-restricted eating (TRE) is a promising strategy to improve metabolic outcomes. However, it remains unclear whether TRE has cardiometabolic benefits in an isocaloric setting and whether its effects depend on the eating timing. We conducted a randomized crossover trial in 31 women with overweight or obesity to directly compare the effects of a 2-week early TRE (eTRE; eating from 8:00 to 16:00) and a 2-week late TRE (lTRE; eating from 13:00 to 21:00) on insulin sensitivity, cardiometabolic risk factors, and the internal circadian phase. During the restricted 8-hour eating period, participants were asked to consume their habitual food quality and quantity. Insulin sensitivity did not differ between (-0.07; 95% CI, -0.77 to 0.62; P = 0.60) or within (eTRE: 0.31; 95% CI, -0.14 to 0.76; P = 0.11; lTRE: 0.19; 95% CI, -0.22 to 0.60; P = 0.25) interventions. Twenty-four-hour glucose, lipid, inflammatory, and oxidative stress markers showed no clinically meaningful between- or within-intervention differences. Participants demonstrated high timely adherence (eTRE, 96.5%; lTRE, 97.7%), unchanged dietary composition and physical activity, minor daily calorie deficit (eTRE, -167 kilocalories/day), and weight loss (eTRE, -1.08 kilograms; lTRE, -0.44 kilograms). In lTRE, the circadian phase in blood monocytes (24 minutes; 95% CI, -5 to 54 minutes; P = 0.10) and sleep midpoint (15 minutes; 95% CI, 7 to 23 minutes; P< 0.001) occurred later compared with eTRE. Overall, in an intended isocaloric setting, neither eTRE nor lTRE improves insulin sensitivity or other cardiometabolic traits, despite a shift of internal circadian clocks.

Targeting

Impact of Intended Isocaloric Early versus Late Time-Restricted Eating on Plasma Lipidome in Women with Overweight or Obesity: Secondary Analysis of the ChronoFast Trial

November 4, 2025

Time-restricted eating (TRE) is a promising strategy against metabolic disorders, but its effects on lipid metabolism remain controversial. The present research assesses and compares the impact of early (eTRE) versus late (lTRE) TRE on the plasma lipidomic profile. This is an exploratory outcome of the previously published randomized crossover trial, which examines 31 women with overweight or obesity who follow a two-week eTRE and a two-week lTRE in an intended isocaloric setting. Blood plasma and subcutaneous adipose tissue biopsies are analyzed using shotgun lipidomics and transcriptomics, respectively. Between interventions and within the lTRE, lipid species and classes, as well as enzyme activity indices, are not substantially changed. Within the eTRE, changes are observed for 103 lipid species, including a reduction of ceramide and phosphatidylcholine classes, and for the desaturation indices D5D, D6D, and D9D, as well as the elongation index ELOVL6. Combined analysis of plasma lipidome and adipose tissue reveals alterations in the glycerophospholipid pathway and in the expression of phospholipase enzymes PLB1, PLA2G6, and PLAG4B, dependent on TRE timing. These results suggest that eating timing during TRE may be crucial for remodeling the plasma lipidome and adipose tissue transcriptome and highlight the need of future lipidomic research in TRE.

Targeting

Multiple sclerosis and circadian rhythms: Can diet act as a treatment?

January 26, 2023

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune inflammatory and neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system (CNS) with increasing incidence and prevalence. MS is associated with inflammatory and metabolic disturbances that, as preliminary human and animal data suggest, might be mediated by disruption of circadian rhythmicity. Nutrition habits can influence the risk for MS, and dietary interventions may be effective in modulating MS disease course. Chronotherapeutic approaches such as time-restricted eating (TRE) may benefit people with MS by stabilizing the circadian clock and restoring immunological and metabolic rhythms, thus potentially counteracting disease progression. This review provides a summary of selected studies on dietary intervention in MS, circadian rhythms, and their disruption in MS, including clock gene variations, circadian hormones, and retino-hypothalamic tract changes. Furthermore, we present studies that reported diurnal variations in MS, which might result from circadian disruption. And lastly, we suggest how chrononutritive approaches like TRE might counteract MS disease activity.