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Human plasma proteomic profiles indicative of cardiorespiratory fitness

Authors :
Daniel H. Katz
Robert E. Gerszten
Lori L. Jennings
Changyu Shen
Theresa Margarethe Rienmüller
Christian Baumgartner
Claude Bouchard
Mark A. Sarzynski
Jacob L. Barber
Pierre M. Jean Beltran
Michelle J. Keyes
Daniela Schranner
Sujoy Ghosh
Robert Ross
Bennet Peterson
Usman A. Tahir
Jeremy M. Robbins
Shuliang Deng
Steven A. Carr
Source :
Nat Metab
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) is a direct measure of human cardiorespiratory fitness and is associated with health. However, the molecular determinants of interindividual differences in baseline (intrinsic) VO2max, and of increases of VO2max in response to exercise training (ΔVO2max), are largely unknown. Here, we measure ~5,000 plasma proteins using an affinity-based platform in over 650 sedentary adults before and after a 20-week endurance-exercise intervention and identify 147 proteins and 102 proteins whose plasma levels are associated with baseline VO2max and ΔVO2max, respectively. Addition of a protein biomarker score derived from these proteins to a score based on clinical traits improves the prediction of an individual’s ΔVO2max. We validate findings in a separate exercise cohort, further link 21 proteins to incident all-cause mortality in a community-based cohort and reproduce the specificity of ~75% of our key findings using antibody-based assays. Taken together, our data shed light on biological pathways relevant to cardiorespiratory fitness and highlight the potential additive value of protein biomarkers in identifying exercise responsiveness in humans. Plasma proteomic profiles from 650 adult humans are measured before and after a 20-week exercise regimen to determine proteins associated with baseline cardiorespiratory fitness and improvements in response to exercise.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b4bcc6c2eb86529bc2bab81bbb542ef2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-021-00400-z