| Literature DB >> 21403846 |
Abstract
Physical inactivity is increasingly recognized as modifiable behavioral risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. A partial list of proposed mechanisms for exercise-induced cardioprotection include induction of heat shock proteins, increase in cardiac antioxidant capacity, expression of endoplasmic reticulum stress proteins, anatomical and physiological changes in the coronary arteries, changes in nitric oxide production, adaptational changes in cardiac mitochondria, increased autophagy, and improved function of sarcolemmal and/or mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels. It is currently unclear which of these protective mechanisms are essential for exercise-induced cardioprotection. However, most investigations focus on sarcolemmal KATP channels, NO production, and mitochondrial changes although it is very likely that other mechanisms may also exist. This paper discusses current information about these aforementioned topics and does not consider potentially important adaptations within blood or the autonomic nervous system. A better understanding of the molecular basis of exercise-induced cardioprotection will help to develop better therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21403846 PMCID: PMC3051318 DOI: 10.4061/2011/972807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-0597 Impact factor: 1.866
Cellular location and function of selected heat shock proteins (HSPs) [22, 23, 32, 37].
| Family | Members | Cellular location | Proposed function (comment) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ubiquitin | Ubiquitin | Cytosol | Protein degradation (ubiquitin levels in cells increase following cellular injury) |
| HSP10 | HSP10 | Mitochondria | Molecular chaperons, cofactor for HSP60 |
| HSP27 | HSP27, HSP26, and so forth | Cytosol, nucleus | Microfilament stabilization, antiapoptotic (variable in size and number in different organisms) |
| HSP60 | HSP60 | Mitochondria | Refolds proteins and prevents aggregation of denatured proteins, proapoptotic. |
| HSP70 | HSP72, HSP73, HSP75, HSP78 | Cytosol, nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum | Molecular chaperons, protein folding, and cytoprotection (HSP72 postulated to play an important role in myocardial protection against I/R injury). |
| HSP90 | HSP90, HSP100, Grp94 | Cytosol, nucleus, ER | May function as a molecular chaperone during maturation of steroid receptors and assists in the folding of newly synthesized peptides, protein translocation. |
Major antioxidants.
| Name | Role | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Endogenous enzymes | Superoxide dismutase (SOD) | Dismutase superoxide to H2O2 | (a) Contains manganese (MnSOD) |
| Catalase | Dismutase H2O2 to H2O | Present in peroxisomes | |
| Glutathione peroxidase | Removes H2O2 and lipid peroxides | Selenoproteins (contains Se2+) | |
| Vitamin E | Lipid peroxidation, scavenges superoxide, hydroxyl and lipid peroxide | Fat soluble | |
| Nonenzymatic substance | Vitamin C | Scavenges superoxide, hydroxyl radicals and H2O2, contributes to regeneration of vit E. Neutralizes oxidants from stimulated neutrophils | Water soluble |
| Scavenges ·OH, O2·− and peroxy radicals | Water soluble | ||
Figure 1Sequence of pathologic events in ischemia reperfusion injury.
Figure 2Proposed mechanisms for exercised-induced cardioprotection.
Figure 3(a, b) Pathophysiological consequences of (a) ischemia and (b) reperfusion. (mPTP, mitochondrial permeability transition pore).
Figure 4selected exercise-induced mitochondrial change in cardiac muscles. (Mitochondrial permeability transition pore, mPTP).
Proposed mechanisms in exercise-induced cardioprotection.
| Mechanisms which mainly decrease ROS production | Mechanisms which mainly repair cellular damages |
|---|---|
| (i) Sarco KATP channles (and possibly mito KATP channles) | (i) HSPs |