Natural daylight during office hours improves glucose control and whole-body substrate metabolism
ContributorsHarmsen, Jan-Frieder; Habets, Ivo; Biancolin, Andrew
; Lesniewska, Agata; Phillips, Nicholas; Metz, Loïc arnaud
; Sanchez-Avila, Juan; Kotte, Marit; Timmermans, Merel; Hashim, Dzhansel; de Kam, Soraya S; Schaart, Gert; Jörgensen, Johanna A; Gemmink, Anne; Moonen-Kornips, Esther; Doligkeit, Daniel; van de Weijer, Tineke; Buitinga, Mijke; Haans, Florian; De Lorenzo, Rebecca; Pallubinsky, Hannah; Gordijn, Marijke C M; Collet, Tinh-Hai
; Kramer, Achim; Schrauwen, Patrick; Dibner, Charna
; Hoeks, Joris
Published inCell metabolism, vol. 38, no. 1, p. 65-81.e10
Publication date2026-01-06
First online date2025-12-18
Abstract
Keywords
- Artificial light
- Circadian clocks
- Daylight
- Glucose control
- Melatonin
- Multi-omics
- Skeletal muscle
- Type 2 diabetes
Affiliation entities
- Faculté de médecine / Section de médecine clinique / Département de médecine
- Faculté de médecine / Section de médecine fondamentale / Département de physiologie cellulaire et métabolisme
- Faculté de médecine / Section de médecine clinique / Département de chirurgie
- Centres et instituts / Institut de génétique et de génomique
Funding
- Swiss National Science Foundation - a- and ß-cellular clocks: a network of functional outputs and their potential therapeutic applications for type 2 diabetes [219187]
- Swiss National Science Foundation - The metabolic effects and mechanisms of time restricted feeding in individuals with metabolic syndrome [167826]
- Swiss National Science Foundation - Aligning the timing of eating and exercise with circadian rhythms for improved metabolic health [212559]
Citation (ISO format)
HARMSEN, Jan-Frieder et al. Natural daylight during office hours improves glucose control and whole-body substrate metabolism. In: Cell metabolism, 2026, vol. 38, n° 1, p. 65–81.e10. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2025.11.006
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Identifiers
- PID : unige:190085
- DOI : 10.1016/j.cmet.2025.11.006
- PMID : 41418772
Additional URL for this publicationhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1550413125004905
Journal ISSN1550-4131
