Literature DB >> 22460363

Light aerobic physical exercise in combination with leucine and/or glutamine-rich diet can improve the body composition and muscle protein metabolism in young tumor-bearing rats.

Emilianne Miguel Salomão1, Maria Cristina Cintra Gomes-Marcondes.   

Abstract

Nutritional supplementation with some amino acids may influence host's responses and also certain mechanism involved in tumor progression. It is known that exercise influences body weight and muscle composition. Previous findings from our group have shown that leucine has beneficial effects on protein composition in cachectic rat model as the Walker 256 tumor. The main purpose of this study was to analyze the effects of light exercise and leucine and/or glutamine-rich diet in body composition and skeletal muscle protein synthesis and degradation in young tumor-bearing rats. Walker tumor-bearing rats were subjected to light aerobic exercise (swimming 30 min/day) and fed a leucine-rich (3%) and/or glutamine-rich (4%) diet for 10 days and compared to healthy young rats. The carcasses were analyzed as total water and fat body content and lean body mass. The gastrocnemious muscles were isolated and used for determination of total protein synthesis and degradation. The chemical body composition changed with tumor growth, increasing body water and reducing body fat content and total body nitrogen. After tumor growth, the muscle protein metabolism was impaired, showing that the muscle protein synthesis was also reduced and the protein degradation process was increased in the gastrocnemius muscle of exercised rats. Although short-term exercise (10 days) alone did not produce beneficial effects that would reduce tumor damage, host protein metabolism was improved when exercise was combined with a leucine-rich diet. Only total carcass nitrogen and protein were recovered by a glutamine-rich diet. Exercise, in combination with an amino acid-rich diet, in particular, leucine, had effects beyond reducing tumoral weight such as improving protein turnover and carcass nitrogen content in the tumor-bearing host.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22460363     DOI: 10.1007/s13105-012-0164-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol Biochem        ISSN: 1138-7548            Impact factor:   4.158


  48 in total

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6.  Effect of a moderate intensity exercise training protocol on the metabolism of macrophages and lymphocytes of tumour-bearing rats.

Authors:  R F Bacurau; M A Belmonte; M C Seelaender; L F Costa Rosa
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7.  Leucine supplementation does not enhance acute strength or running performance but affects serum amino acid concentration.

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Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 3.520

8.  A leucine-supplemented diet improved protein content of skeletal muscle in young tumor-bearing rats.

Authors:  M C C Gomes-Marcondes; G Ventrucci; M T Toledo; L Cury; J C Cooper
Journal:  Braz J Med Biol Res       Date:  2003-10-22       Impact factor: 2.590

9.  Combined growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor I in addition to glutamine-supplemented TPN results in net protein anabolism in critical illness.

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10.  Cytokines, the acute-phase response, and resting energy expenditure in cachectic patients with pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  J S Falconer; K C Fearon; C E Plester; J A Ross; D C Carter
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  9 in total

1.  Walker 256 tumor-bearing rats demonstrate altered interstitial cells of Cajal. Effects on ICC in the Walker 256 tumor model.

Authors:  L Fracaro; F C V Frez; B C Silva; G E Vicentini; S R G de Souza; H A Martins; D R Linden; F A Guarnier; J N Zanoni
Journal:  Neurogastroenterol Motil       Date:  2015-11-03       Impact factor: 3.598

2.  Leucine-rich diet supplementation modulates foetal muscle protein metabolism impaired by Walker-256 tumour.

Authors:  Bread Cruz; Maria C C Gomes-Marcondes
Journal:  Reprod Biol Endocrinol       Date:  2014-01-03       Impact factor: 5.211

3.  Effect of glutamine enriched nutrition support on surgical patients with gastrointestinal tumor: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

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4.  Leucine-rich diet alters the 1H-NMR based metabolomic profile without changing the Walker-256 tumour mass in rats.

Authors:  Laís Rosa Viana; Rafael Canevarolo; Anna Caroline Perina Luiz; Raquel Frias Soares; Camila Lubaczeuski; Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri; Maria Cristina Cintra Gomes-Marcondes
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Review 5.  Nutritional Interventions in Cancer Cachexia: Evidence and Perspectives From Experimental Models.

Authors:  Wouter R P H van de Worp; Annemie M W J Schols; Jan Theys; Ardy van Helvoort; Ramon C J Langen
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Review 6.  Metabolomics and its Applications in Cancer Cachexia.

Authors:  Pengfei Cui; Xiaoyi Li; Caihua Huang; Qinxi Li; Donghai Lin
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Review 7.  Leucine Supplementation in Cancer Cachexia: Mechanisms and a Review of the Pre-Clinical Literature.

Authors:  Anna G Beaudry; Michelle L Law
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2022-07-09       Impact factor: 6.706

8.  Nutritional leucine supplementation attenuates cardiac failure in tumour-bearing cachectic animals.

Authors:  Aline Tatiane Toneto; Luiz Alberto Ferreira Ramos; Emilianne Miguel Salomão; Rebeka Tomasin; Miguel Arcanjo Aereas; Maria Cristina Cintra Gomes-Marcondes
Journal:  J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle       Date:  2016-02-24       Impact factor: 12.910

9.  Effects of whole-body electromyostimulation combined with individualized nutritional support on body composition in patients with advanced cancer: a controlled pilot trial.

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Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2018-09-12       Impact factor: 4.430

  9 in total

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