| Literature DB >> 28583927 |
Allan J Davie1, Li Wen2, Andrew R E Cust3, Rosalind Beavers1, Tom Fyfe4, Shi Zhou5.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of six weeks of normobaric hypoxic training on transcriptional expression of the genes associated with mitochondrial and glycolytic activities in Thoroughbred horses. Eight horses were divided into two groups of four. They completed an identical incremental, moderate intensity training program, except that one group trained in a hypoxic chamber with 15% oxygen for 30 min on alternate days except Sundays (HT), while the other group trained in normal air (NC). Prior to and post training, heart rate and blood lactate were measured during an incremental treadmill test. Muscle biopsy samples were taken prior to and 24 h post the training period for qPCR analysis of mRNA changes in VEGF, PPARγ, HIF-1α, PGC-1α, COX4, AK3, LDH, PFK, PKm and SOD-2. No significant differences between the HT and NC were detected by independent-samples t-test with Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons (P>0.05) in relative changes of mRNA abundance. There were no significant differences between groups for heart rate and blood lactate during the treadmill test. The outcomes indicated that this hypoxia training program did not cause a significant variation in basal level expression of the selected mRNAs in Thoroughbreds as compared with normoxic training.Entities:
Keywords: Gene expression; Hypoxia; Muscle; Thoroughbred; Training
Year: 2017 PMID: 28583927 PMCID: PMC5550905 DOI: 10.1242/bio.020388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Comparison of mRNA changes (ΔCt=Ct of the target−Ct of internal reference), with main effect (training) and interaction (training by group), using general linear model with repeated measures analysis
Fig. 1.Relative changes (fold change with reference to the pre-training value) in mRNA expression at rest as determined by the 2 Data presented are group means with standard deviation. NC, normoxic control; HT, hypoxic training.
Comparisons of blood lactate and heart rate (mean±s.d.) at treadmill speeds of 14, 21 and 28 km h
List of primers (