| Literature DB >> 28874356 |
Nina Brandt1, Lene Nielsen1, Bjørg Thiellesen Buch1, Anders Gudiksen1, Stine Ringholm1, Ylva Hellsten2, Jens Bangsbo2, Henriette Pilegaard1.
Abstract
PGC-1α has been suggested to regulate exercise training-induced metabolic adaptations and autophagy in skeletal muscle. The factors regulating PGC-1α, however, have not been fully resolved. The aim was to investigate the impact of β-adrenergic signaling in PGC-1α-mediated metabolic adaptations in skeletal muscle with exercise training. Muscle was obtained from muscle-specific PGC-1α knockout (MKO) and lox/lox mice 1) 3 h after a single exercise bout with or without prior injection of propranolol or 3 h after a single injection of clenbuterol and 2) after 5 wk of wheel running exercise training with or without propranolol treatment or after 5 wk of clenbuterol treatment. A single clenbuterol injection and an acute exercise bout similarly increased the mRNA content of both N-terminal and full-length PGC-1α isoforms, and prior propranolol treatment reduced the exercise-induced increase in mRNA of all isoforms. Furthermore, a single clenbuterol injection elicited a PGC-1α-dependent increase in cytochrome c and vascular endothelial growth factor mRNA, whereas prolonged clenbuterol treatment increased fiber size but reduced capillary density. Exercise training increased the protein content of OXPHOS, LC3I, and Parkin in a PGC-1α-dependent manner without effect of propranolol, while an exercise training-induced increase in Akt2 and p62 protein required PGC-1α and was blunted by prolonged propranolol treatment. This suggests that β-adrenergic signaling is not required for PGC-1α-mediated exercise training-induced adaptations in mitochondrial proteins, but contributes to exercise training-mediated adaptations in insulin signaling and autophagy regulation through PGC-1α. Furthermore, changes observed with acute stimulation of compounds like clenbuterol and propranolol may not lead to corresponding adaptations with prolonged treatment.Entities:
Keywords: PGC-1α; PGC-1α isoforms; autophagy; clenbuterol, propranolol; exercise; skeletal muscle; training; β-adrenergic signaling
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28874356 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00082.2017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 0193-1849 Impact factor: 4.310