Literature DB >> 33486778

Low responders to endurance training exhibit impaired hypertrophy and divergent biological process responses in rat skeletal muscle.

Daniel W D West1,2,3, Thomas M Doering4,5, Jamie-Lee M Thompson4, Boris P Budiono6, Sarah J Lessard7,8, Lauren G Koch9, Steven L Britton10, Roland Steck11, Nuala M Byrne12, Matthew A Brown13, Jonathan M Peake11, Kevin J Ashton4, Vernon G Coffey4.   

Abstract

NEW
FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? The extent to which genetics determines adaptation to endurance versus resistance exercise is unclear. Previously, a divergent selective breeding rat model showed that genetic factors play a major role in the response to aerobic training. Here, we asked: do genetic factors that underpin poor adaptation to endurance training affect adaptation to functional overload? What is the main finding and its importance? Our data show that heritable factors in low responders to endurance training generated differential gene expression that was associated with impaired skeletal muscle hypertrophy. A maladaptive genotype to endurance exercise appears to dysregulate biological processes responsible for mediating exercise adaptation, irrespective of the mode of contraction stimulus. ABSTRACT: Divergent skeletal muscle phenotypes result from chronic resistance-type versus endurance-type contraction, reflecting the principle of training specificity. Our aim was to determine whether there is a common set of genetic factors that influence skeletal muscle adaptation to divergent contractile stimuli. Female rats were obtained from a genetically heterogeneous rat population and were selectively bred from high responders to endurance training (HRT) or low responders to endurance training (LRT; n = 6/group; generation 19). Both groups underwent 14 days of synergist ablation to induce functional overload of the plantaris muscle before comparison to non-overloaded controls of the same phenotype. RNA sequencing was performed to identify Gene Ontology biological processes with differential (LRT vs. HRT) gene set enrichment. We found that running distance, determined in advance of synergist ablation, increased in response to aerobic training in HRT but not LRT (65 ± 26 vs. -6 ± 18%, mean ± SD, P < 0.0001). The hypertrophy response to functional overload was attenuated in LRT versus HRT (20.1 ± 5.6 vs. 41.6 ± 16.1%, P = 0.015). Between-group differences were observed in the magnitude of response of 96 upregulated and 101 downregulated pathways. A further 27 pathways showed contrasting upregulation or downregulation in LRT versus HRT in response to functional overload. In conclusion, low responders to aerobic endurance training were also low responders for compensatory hypertrophy, and attenuated hypertrophy was associated with differential gene set regulation. Our findings suggest that genetic factors that underpin aerobic training maladaptation might also dysregulate the transcriptional regulation of biological processes that contribute to adaptation to mechanical overload.
© 2021 The Authors. Experimental Physiology © 2021 The Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  heritable factors; molecular networks; skeletal muscle plasticity; specificity of adaptation

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33486778      PMCID: PMC8686756          DOI: 10.1113/EP089301

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Physiol        ISSN: 0958-0670            Impact factor:   2.969


  49 in total

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-03-09       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  The effect of mechanical loading on the MyHC synthesis rate and composition in rat plantaris muscle.

Authors:  A Pehme; K Alev; P Kaasik; A Julkunen; T Seene
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6.  Physiological adaptations to resistance training in rats selectively bred for low and high response to aerobic exercise training.

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Review 7.  Understanding the Warburg effect: the metabolic requirements of cell proliferation.

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Review 8.  Systematic review of the synergist muscle ablation model for compensatory hypertrophy.

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10.  Time course of gene expression during mouse skeletal muscle hypertrophy.

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Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2013-07-18
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2.  Effect of short-term hindlimb immobilization on skeletal muscle atrophy and the transcriptome in a low compared with high responder to endurance training model.

Authors:  Jamie-Lee M Thompson; Daniel W D West; Thomas M Doering; Boris P Budiono; Sarah J Lessard; Lauren G Koch; Steven L Britton; Nuala M Byrne; Matthew A Brown; Kevin J Ashton; Vernon G Coffey
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