* TSX ends down 0.3% at 22,308.93

* Index touches a record intraday high

* Energy falls 1.2%; oil settles 1.3% lower

* Canadian job gains top forecasts in April

May 10 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index ended lower on Friday as oil prices fell and stronger-than-expected jobs data crimped expectations for Bank of Canada interest rate cuts, with the index pulling back from an earlier record high.

The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index ended down 66.9 points, or 0.3%, at 22,308.93, after it touched an intraday record high of 22,470.27.

For the week, the index was up 1.7%, its biggest weekly advance in nearly five months, as investors cheered rising corporate profits and grew more hopeful that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates this year.

"We are in this mode where good might be better than great when it comes to the labor market and economic growth data as investors look at everything through the lens as to what it means for central banks," said Angelo Kourkafas, a senior investment strategist at Edward Jones in St. Louis, Missouri.

Canada's economy added five times the number of jobs that were forecast for April and the unemployment rate unexpectedly held at 6.1%, dampening market bets for a June rate cut.

Money markets see a 44% chance that the Canadian central will ease next month, down from nearly 60% before the data.

Investors also weighed U.S. data that showed inflation expectations moving higher in May.

The energy sector fell 1.2% as the price of oil settled 1.3% lower at $78.26 a barrel on the prospect of higher-for-longer U.S. borrowing costs, which could slow demand.

Technology was also a drag, falling 2%, as shares of e-commerce company Shopify ended 5.6% lower.

Sun Life Financial shares dropped 6.7% after the life insurer missed core profit estimates for the first time in 12 quarters, while shares of CI Financial Corp tumbled 12.1% after its quarterly results. (Reporting by Fergal Smith in Toronto and Purvi Agarwal in Bengaluru; Editing by Ravi Prakash Kumar and Jonathan Oatis)