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Impaired response to exercise intervention in the vasculature in metabolic syndrome

Authors :
Nicholas Birdsey
Matthew J. Miller
Russell L. Moore
Amy C. Keller
Peter A. Watson
Leslie A. Knaub
Jane E.B. Reusch
Adam J. Chicco
Monique I Lloyd
Juan Villarreal
Sylvia A. McCune
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Physical activity decreases risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality; however, the specific impact of exercise on the diabetic vasculature is unexamined. We hypothesized that an acute, moderate exercise intervention in diabetic and hypertensive rats would induce mitochondrial biogenesis and mitochondrial antioxidant defence to improve vascular resilience. SHHF/ Mcc-facp lean (hypertensive) and obese (hypertensive, insulin resistant), as well as Sprague Dawley (SD) control rats were run on a treadmill for 8 days. In aortic lysates from SD rats, we observed a significant increase in subunit proteins from oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) complexes I–III, with no changes in the lean or obese SHHF rats. Exercise also increased the expression of mitochondrial antioxidant defence uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) ( p < 0.05) in SHHF lean rats, whereas no changes were observed in the SD or SHHF obese rats with exercise. We evaluated upstream signalling pathways for mitochondrial biogenesis, and only peroxisome proliferators–activated receptor gamma coactivator 1α (PGC-1α) significantly decreased in SHHF lean rats ( p < 0.05) with exercise. In these experiments, we demonstrate absent mitochondrial induction with exercise exposure in models of chronic vascular disease. These findings suggest that chronic vascular stress results in decreased sensitivity of vasculature to the adaptive mitochondrial responses normally induced by exercise.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a80cc62a7f8315f713de0073d12d35d3