| Literature DB >> 29185059 |
Paula Andréa Malveira Cavalcante1,2,3,4, Marcos Fernandes Gregnani5,6,7, Jessica Salles Henrique8,9, Fábio Henrique Ornellas10,6,7, Ronaldo Carvalho Araújo10,5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Only a few studies have addressed the relationship between toll-like receptors 2 and 4 (TLR2 and TLR4) and the production of local and systemic cytokines in response to physical exercise, and they have produced conflicting results. We aimed to determine whether acute and chronic exercise outcomes are associated with changes in TLR2 and TLR4 expression and signaling and if so, the mechanisms that connect them.Entities:
Keywords: Aerobic; Exercise; Inflammation; Resistance; TLR2; TLR4; Toll-like; Training
Year: 2017 PMID: 29185059 PMCID: PMC5705532 DOI: 10.1186/s40798-017-0111-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med Open ISSN: 2198-9761
Fig. 1Signaling involving TLR2 and TLR4 in strenuous and moderate aerobic exercise. Excess physical exercise increases LPS levels and contributes to TLR2, TLR4, and NF-kB upregulation. As a consequence, there is an increase in circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. Stimuli of exercise stress transmit nerve impulses to the brain, raising the levels of counter-regulatory hormones such as cortisol. Accordingly, high mitochondrial oxidative stress induced by strenuous aerobic exercise causes excessive intracellular ROS formation that also upregulates NF-kB expression, intensifying the acute inflammation state. Under these excessive stress conditions, adaptive immunity can be triggered by the increase in costimulatory molecules in antigen-presenting cells, thus activating T cells. In contrast, the regular physical exercise of moderate intensity reduces LPS, TLR2, TLR4, and NF-kB expression. Under these conditions, NF-kB does not translocate to the cell nucleus. Instead, the anti-inflammatory pathway PI3K/AKT/mTOR is activated, promoting the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-10 that inactivate TNF-α. Physical exercise at a moderate intensity also has a compensatory effect against the exacerbated production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species responsible for the oxidative damage. Elevated production of IGF-1 is observed after exercise. IGF-1 provides an anti-inflammatory effect on the skeletal muscle cells, reducing the expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines through a decrease of TLR4 expression
Eligibility codes
| Eligibility codes | Description |
|---|---|
| I | Included articles |
| D | Duplicate articles |
| E1 | Non-English articles |
| E2 | Articles that did not provide enough information |
| E3 | Literature review articles |
| E4 | Articles that did not cover Toll-like receptors |
| E5 | Articles studying TLRs other than TLR2 and TLR4 |
| E6 | Articles without exercise protocols |
| E7 | Articles that used animal models other than humans, rats, and mice |
| E8 | Articles that involved diet, supplementation, or drugs |
Distribution of the number of articles per studied groups
| Groups | Keywords | Number of articles | Number of articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | “Exercise” and “TLR” | 46 | 54 |
| 2 | “Exercise” and “TLR2” | 19 | 23 |
| 3 | “Exercise” and “TLR4” | 64 | 71 |
| 4 | “Exercise” and “Toll-like” | 111 | 123 |
| 5 | “Training” and “TLR” | 158 | 181 |
| 6 | “Training” and “TLR2” | 89 | 97 |
| 7 | “Training” and “TLR4” | 154 | 178 |
| 8 | “Training” and “Toll-like” | 372 | 410 |
| 9 | “Physical activity” and “TLR” | 66 | 72 |
| 10 | “Physical activity” and “TLR2” | 43 | 46 |
| 11 | “Physical activity” and “TLR4” | 91 | 104 |
| 12 | “Physical activity” and “Toll-like” | 172 | 189 |
| Total | 1.385 | 1.548 |
Fig. 2Literature search flowchart
Results of TLR2 and TLR4 expression of all eligible articles divided by type and frequency of exercise
| Physical exercise | ↓TLR2 and 4 | ↔TLR2 and 4 | ↑TLR2 and 4 | No results | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % |
| % |
| % | |||
| Total | 21 | 54 | 7 | 18 | 9 | 23 | 2 | 5 | 39 | |
| Subgroups by exercise types | Chronic resistance | 4 | 67 | 2 | 33 | 6 | ||||
| Acute resistance | 3 | 75 | 1 | 25 | 4 | |||||
| Chronic aerobic | 7 | 58 | 2 | 17 | 3 | 25 | 12 | |||
| Acute aerobic | 6 | 40 | 1 | 7 | 6 | 40 | 2 | 13 | 15 | |
| Combined | 1 | 50 | 1 | 50 | 2 | |||||
Fig. 3Effects of exercise on TLR2 and TLR4. For chronic resistance exercise, 67% of studies reported a reduction of TLR4 and/or TLR2 expression. For acute resistance exercise, 75% of studies revealed a decrease in the expression of these receptors. For chronic aerobic exercise, 58% of studies reported a reduction in TLR4 and/or TLR2 expression and 25% found an increase in the expression of TLR4 and/or TLR2. For acute aerobic exercise, 40% of studies showed a decrease and 40% reported an increase. Regarding combined exercise, 50% of studies reported a reduction in the expression of the receptors
Modulation of TLR2 and TLR4 after chronic resistance exercise
| Authors | Sample | Disease | Frequency, intensity, and duration | Post-exercise results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR | Cytokine | Other | ||||
| Zanchi et al. 2010 [ | Wistar rats | No disease | 2 days/week, 80–95% MVSC, 12 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α ↔IL-6 ↔IL-10 | ↔Hsp70 |
| Cheng et al. 2015 [ | Adults | Low back pain | 3 days/week, no information, 4 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α ↓IL-6 | ↓NF-kBp65, ↓p53, ↑SIRT1, ↑PGC-1α, ↑PPAR-γ, ↑FoxO1, ↑FoxO3, ↑IKB, ↑SOD |
| Rodriguez-Miguelez et al. 2014 [ | Elderly | No disease | 2 days/week, 60–80% 1 RM, 8 weeks | ↓TLR2, ↓TLR4 | ↔TNF-α ↑IL-10 | ↓MyD88, ↓p65, ↓phospho-p38/p38, ↓IKKi/IKKƐ, ↓TRIF, ↓phospho-IRF3/IRF3, ↓phospho-IRF7/IRF7, ↓Hsp60, ↑Hsp70, ↑phospho-ERK1/2, ↓CRP. |
| Rodriguez-Miguelez et al. 2015 [ | Elderly | No disease | 2 days/week, 20–35 Hz, 8 week | ↓TLR2, ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α ↑IL-10 | ↓MyD88, ↓p65, ↓TRIF, ↓Hsp60, ↑Hsp70, ↓CRP |
| Prestes et al. 2015 [ | Elderly | No disease | 2 days/week, 6–14 RM, 16 weeks | ↔TLR4 | ↔IL-1β ↔IL-10 | ↔BDNF, ↔irisin |
| Phillips et al. 2012 [ | Elderly | Obesity | 3 days/week, 8–12 RM, 12 weeks | ↔TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓CRP, ↓leptin, ↑LPS-IL10, ↑LPS-TNF, |
Modulation of TLR2 and TLR4 after acute resistance exercise
| Authors | Sample | Disease | Intensity and duration | Post-exercise results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR | Cytokine | Other | ||||
| Millard et al. 2013 [ | Adults | No disease | 120–150 beats/min, 68.8 s (up and down 150 steps) | ↔TLR2 | ↔IFN-γ | ↑CD3−/CD56+NK, ↓NK CD56bright |
| Fernandez-Gonzalo et al. 2012 [ | Adults | No disease | 40–50 MVIC, 18 acute eccentric bouts | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓CD14, ↓MyD88, ↓TRIF, ↓TRAF6, ↓p65, ↓phospho-IκB, ↓phospho-ERK1/2, ↓CRP, 2 h after the 2nd acute session. |
| Fernandez-Gonzalo et al. 2014 [ | Adults | No disease | 40–50 MVIC, 18 acute eccentric bouts | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓CD14, ↓MyD88, ↓TRIF, ↓TRAF6, ↓p65, ↓phospho-IκB, ↓phospho-ERK1/2, ↓CRP, 2 h after the 2nd acute session. |
| McFarlin et al. 2004 [ | Elderly | No disease | 80% 1 RM, 1 bout/3 sets/10 repetitions | ↓TLR4 | ↔TNF-α ↔IL-6 | ↔CD14 |
Modulation of TLR2 and TLR4 after chronic aerobic exercise
| Authors | Sample | Disease | Frequency, intensity, and duration | Post-exercise results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR | Cytokine | Other | ||||
| Ma et al. 2013 [ | Wistar rats | Cerebral ischemia | 5 days/week, 12 m/min, 3 days–2 weeks | ↓TLR4, ↓TLR2 | ↓NFkB e ↓MyD88 | |
| Lira et al. 2010 [ | Wistar rats | No disease | 5 days/week, 15–25 m/min, 11 weeks | ↓ TLR4 (TR group), ↑TLR4 (R group) | TR group: | TR group (trained) ↓NFkBp65. |
| Fashi et al. 2015 [ | Wistar rats | Pulmonary infection | 5 days/week, mean speed of the group workload, 4 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓NF-kB (exe group+PM10) |
| Jun et al. 2014 [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | Ovariectomized rats | 5 days/week, 18–26 m/min, 16 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓MCP-1 in adipose tissue (moderate trained group). |
| Holland et al. 2015 [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | No disease | 1/day, 30 m/min, 10 days | ↔TLR4 | ↓TNF-α ↔IL-6 | Moderate training: ↔NFkB, ↔CCL2, |
| Zwagerman et al. 2010 [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | Stroke | 5 days/week, 30 m/min, 3 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓Cerebral infarction volume | |
| Choi et al. 2014 [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | Alzheimer’s disease | 5 days/week, 2–8 m/min, 6 weeks | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α ↓IL-1α | ↓NF-kB, in the STZ-exe group. |
| Zheng et al. 2015 [ | Adults (members of a university badminton club) | No disease | 3 days/week, no information, 26–32 days | ↑TLR2, ↔TLR4, with or without microbial antigen stimulation | ↑TNF-α | |
| Robinson et al. 2015 [ | Adults | Pre-diabetes | 1/day, 65–90% peak heart rate, 2 weeks | ↓TLR4, ↓TLR2 | ↔TNF-α ↔IL-6 | ↓Fasting glucose in group MICT (moderate-intensity continuous training). |
| Nickel et al. 2011 [ | Adults (amateur marathon runners) | Obesity | Training documented with respect to intensity, duration, and kilometers run per week by a written individual protocol, 10 weeks | ↑TLR2 in LNE group (lean-non-elite). | ↔TNF-α | ↑oxLDL in LE (lean-elite); ↓oxLDL in ONE (obese-non-elite). |
| Nickel et al. 2012 [ | Adults (amateur marathon runners) | Obesity | Training documented with respect to intensity, duration, and kilometers run per week by a written individual protocol, 10 weeks | ↔TLR2, ↔TLR4 | ↑TNF-α (24 h post-marathon) | ↑BDCA-1, ↓BDCA2, ↓TLR7, ↑PCR, ↔oxLDL |
| Ghosh et al. 2015 [ | Adults and elderly | No disease | 3–4 days/week, 65–80% VO2max, 16 weeks | ↑TLR4 (aged individuals) | In elderly: ↑NF-kBp65, ↑NF-kBp50, ↑pJNK, ↑endotoxin, ↔pERK, ↔p-p38, ↑insulin resistance. | |
Modulation of TLR2 and TLR4 after acute aerobic exercise
| Authors | Sample | Disease | Intensity and duration | Post-exercise results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR | Cytokine | Other | ||||
| Rosa et al. 2011 [ | Wistar rats | No disease | 70% VO2max, 50 min | ↑TLR4 | ↑MyD-88, ↑TRAF6, ↑NF-kBp65 | |
| Rodriguez-Miguelez et al. 2015 [ | Wistar rats | No disease | 16 m/min, 90 min/18 bouts/5 min/bout | ↑TLR4 | ↑TNF-α | ↑HIF-1α, ↑VEGF, ↑eNOS, ↑MPO. |
| Liao et al. 2010 [ | Sprague-Dawley rats | No disease | 25 m/min, 1–2 h | ↓TLR4 | ↑TNF-α | ↑TNF-α, ↑NFkB, ↑p65, ↑ROS, ↑endotoxina |
| Zbinden-Foncea et al. 2012 [ | Mice | No disease | 70% of FCmax, two bouts of 60 min | ↑TLR2, ↑TLR4 | ↑NEFA, ↑p38MAPK, ↑JNK. | |
| Tanaka et al. 2010 [ | Mice | No disease | 9 m/min to exhaustion, 1 acute bout | ↔TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | |
| Ortega et al. 2009 [ | Adults | No disease | 70% VO2 max,1 h | Hsp72-induced stimulation of neutrophil chemotaxis disappeared when TLR2 was blocked. | ||
| Lancaster et al. 2005 [ | Adults | No disease | 65% VO2max, 1.5 h | ↓TLR4, ↓TLR2 | ↓IL-6 | |
| Booth et al. 2010 [ | Adults | No disease | 60 km distance in the cycle the fastest possible time. Heart rate (bpm) and power output (watts) were monitored | ↑TLR2, ↑TLR4 | ↓HLA.DR | |
| Simpson et al. 2009 [ | Adults | No disease | 75% VO2max, 45 min | ↓TLR4, ↓TLR2 | ↓HLA.DR | |
| Neubauer et al. 2013 [ | Adults | No disease | Borg 6–20, 10 km | ↑TLR4 | ↑IL-6 | ↑IRAK3, ↑creatin kinase 3 h after, ↑plasma myoglobin 3 h after, ↑neutrophil 3 h after |
| Oliveira and Gleeson 2010 [ | Adults | No disease | 75% VO2peak, 1.5 h | ↓TLR4 | TLR4 returned to basal levels within 4 h after exercise, ↔TLR2. | |
| Radom-Aizik et al. 2014 [ | Adults | No disease | 82% VO2peak, 2-min bouts | ↓TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | ↓CD36 e ↑EREG genes and ↑CXCR4 |
| Light et al. 2009 [ | Adults | Chronic fatigue syndrome | 70% age-predicted maximal heart rate, 5–9 min | ↑TLR4 | ↑IL6 | ↑Pain ↑mental fatigue. |
| White et al. 2012 [ | Adults | Multiple sclerosis (ME) and fibromyalgia (SDC) | 70% of age-predicted maximal heart rate, 20 min | ME: ↓TLR4 | ME: after 8 h | ↑Fatigue ↑pain, ↑adrenergic receptors. |
| Li and Geib 2013 [ | Adults and elderly | No disease | 1 h Tai Chi | ↑IL-13 | ↓CD14+CD16+ | |
Modulation of TLR2 and TLR4 after combined exercise (aerobic and resistance)
| Authors | Sample | Disease | Frequency, intensity, and duration | Post-exercise results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR | Cytokine | Other | ||||
| Stewart et al. 2005 [ | Adults and elderly | No disease | 3 days/week, 70–80% 1 RM and 50–70% of heart rate reserve, 12 weeks | ↓TLR4, ↔TLR2 | ↔TNF-α | |
| Timmerman et al. 2008 [ | Elderly | No disease | 3 days/week, 70–80% 1 RM and 70–80% of heart rate reserve, 12 weeks | ↔TLR4 | ↓TNF-α | |