| Literature DB >> 27736966 |
Nathalie Thorin-Trescases1, Doug Hayami1,2, Carol Yu1,3, Xiaoyan Luo1, Albert Nguyen1,3, Jean-François Larouche1,2, Julie Lalongé2, Christine Henri1, André Arsenault1,4, Mathieu Gayda1,2, Martin Juneau1,2, Jean Lambert1,5, Eric Thorin1,3, Anil Nigam1,2.
Abstract
Pro-inflammatory angiopoietin-like 2 (angptl2) promotes endothelial dysfunction in mice and circulating angptl2 is higher in patients with cardiovascular diseases. We previously reported that a single bout of physical exercise was able to reduce angptl2 levels in coronary patients. We hypothesized that chronic exercise would reduce angptl2 in patients with post-acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and endothelial dysfunction. Post-ACS patients (n = 40, 10 women) were enrolled in a 3-month exercise-based prevention program. Plasma angptl2, hs-CRP, and endothelial function assessed by scintigraphic forearm blood flow, were measured before and at the end of the study. Exercise increased VO2peak by 10% (p<0.05), but did not significantly affect endothelial function, in both men and women. In contrast, exercise reduced angptl2 levels only in men (-26±7%, p<0.05), but unexpectedly not in women (+30±16%), despite similar initial levels in both groups. Exercise reduced hs-CRP levels in men but not in women. In men, levels of angptl2, but not of hs-CRP, reached at the end of the training program were negatively correlated with VO2peak (r = -0.462, p = 0.012) and with endothelial function (r = -0.419, p = 0.033) measured at baseline: better initial cardiopulmonary fitness and endothelial function correlated with lower angptl2 levels after exercise. Pre-exercise angptl2 levels were lower if left ventricular ejection time was long (p<0.05) and the drop in angptl2 induced by exercise was greater if the cardiac output was high (p<0.05). In conclusion, in post-ACS men, angptl2 levels are sensitive to chronic exercise training. Low circulating angptl2 reached after training may reflect good endothelial and cardiopulmonary functions.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27736966 PMCID: PMC5063321 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Impact of 3-month aerobic exercise training on anthropometric and hemodynamic parameters in post-acute coronary syndrome patients (data are mean±SEM or median [25th-75th] of (n) patients).
| Post-ACS patients (n = 40) | Post-ACS Men (n = 30) | Post-ACS Women (n = 10) | p-value Men | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 81.6±2.4 (40) | 85.2±2.6 (30) | 70.8±3.4 (10) | |
| After exercise | 81.6±2.4 (40) | 85.2±2.8 (30) | 70.8±3.7 (10) | |
| Baseline | 99.2±1.8 (36) | 97.5 [94–108] (28) | 93.1±4.2 (8) | |
| After exercise | 99.8±2.1 (32) | 99.0 [94–105] (25) | 96.8±6.8 (7) | 0.2091 |
| Baseline | 28.5±1.2 (39) | 25.2±1.1 (29) | 37.8±1.3 (10) | |
| After exercise | 28.1±1.3 (40) | 24.7±1.1 (30) | 37.6±1.5 (10) | |
| Baseline | 29.0±1.0 (39) | 27.3±1.2 (29) | 34.0±1.1 (10) | |
| After exercise | 28.5±1.2 (40) | 26.5±1.3 (30) | 34.9±1.8 (10) | |
| Baseline | 26.9 [25–31] (40) | 27.4 [25–30] (30) | 28.6±1.4 (10) | 0.8759 |
| After exercise | 26.9 [25–30] (40) | 26.7 [25–30] (30) | 28.6±1.5 (10) | 0.7906 |
| Baseline | 64±1 (40) | 65±2 (30) | 63±2 (10) | 0.6344 |
| After exercise | 64±1 (40) | 64±1 (30) | 64±2 (10) | 0.9056 |
| Baseline | 120 [110–130] (40) | 118 [110–129] (30) | 129±4 (10) | 0.0537 |
| After exercise | 118 [108–130] (40) | 117 [108–124] (30) | 132±7 (10) | 0.0877 |
| Baseline | 69±1 (40) | 69±1 (30) | 70±3 (10) | 0.7941 |
| After exercise | 68±1 (40) | 68±1 (30) | 72±2 (10) | 0.0898 |
| Baseline | 28.3 [25–32] (39) | 28.4 [25–34] (29) | 25.8±1.0 (10) | 0.0644 |
| After exercise | 32.2 [26–137] | 33.8 [27–38] | 28.6±1.5 |
*: p<0.05 versus baseline
BMI: body mass index; SBP: systolic blood pressure; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; VO2max/LBM: maximal cardiorespiratory capacity corrected by the lean body mass.
Effect of sex on initial, final and initial-final (Delta) circulating levels of angptl2 (ng/ml) (mean±SEM or median [25th-75th] of (n) patients).
P values for the effect of sex on angptl2 values are indicated.
| Angptl2initial | Angptl2final | Delta Angptl2initial—Angptl2final | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 2.75 [1.51–5.77] (30) | 1.68 [1.02–3.09] (30) | 0.41 [-0.08–2.31] (30) |
| Women | 4.44±1.20 (10) | 5.06±1.24 (10) | -0.63±0.43 (10) |
| P value Sex | 0.864 | 0.030 | 0.006 |
Fig 1(a) Three-month aerobic exercise training lowered circulating angptl2 levels in post-acute coronary syndrome men (n = 30), but not in women (n = 10). Angptl2 levels were measured at baseline and at the end of the 3-month prevention program. Data are presented as paired individual values; *: P<0.05 versus baseline (Wicolxon signed rank test). (b) Percentage changes in angptl2 levels and in cardiopulmonary fitness (VO2peak/lean body mass, ml/min/kg) between baseline and the end of the training program. Negative values correspond to a reduction in angptl2 levels; positive values correspond to an increase in angptl2 levels or in VO2peak. Data are presented as mean±SEM of n values; *: P<0.05 versus values observed in men (Mann-Whitney test). (c) Negative correlation between angptl2 levels (log transformed) measured at the end of the 3-month training program and VO2peak measured at baseline (in men: r = -0.462, P = 0.0116, n = 29; in women: r = -0.461, P = 0.1797, n = 10). (d) No correlation between hs-CRP levels (log transformed) measured at the end of the 3-month training program and VO2peak measured at baseline (in men: r = -0.033, P = 0.865, n = 29; in women: r = 0.330, P = 0.352, n = 10).
Fig 2(a) Three-month aerobic exercise training affected endothelial function neither in men (n = 26) nor in women (n = 5) with post-acute coronary syndrome. Endothelial function was measured at baseline and at the end of the program. (b) Endothelial function before and after exercise in patients (men and women combined) categorized according to their initial value of endothelial function: endothelial dysfunction is defined by baseline values lower than 3.55. Data are presented as paired individual values in (a) and as median [10th-90th] in (b). (c) Aerobic exercise training reduces angptl2 levels in post-acute coronary syndrome men patients displaying baseline endothelial dysfunction (defined with values of endothelial function lower than 3.55) (n = 15), or normal endothelial function (n = 9). Angptl2 levels were measured at baseline and at the end of the program. Data are presented as paired individual values. *: P<0.05 versus baseline (Wicolxon signed rank test).
Fig 3(a) Negative correlation between angptl2 levels (log transformed) measured at the end of the training program and endothelial function measured in baseline (in men: r = -0.419, P = 0.0031, n = 26). (b) No correlation between hs-CRP levels (log transformed) measured at the end of the training program and baseline endothelial function (in men: r = -0.228, P = 0.2623, n = 26).
Regression coefficient (B), standard error and P values for the association between different independent variables on initial, final and initial-final circulating levels of angptl2 (Ln transformed).
| Dependent variable | Independent variable | B | Standard error | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ln Angptl2initial | LVETinitial | -0.003 | 0.001 | 0.007 |
| Ln Angptl2final | Endothelial functioninitial | -0.146 | 0.069 | 0.048 |
| LnAngptl2initial−LnAngptl2final | Cardiac outputinitial | 0.031 | 0.014 | 0.032 |