Literature DB >> 33810953

Moderate offspring exercise offsets the harmful effects of maternal protein deprivation on mitochondrial function and oxidative balance by modulating sirtuins.

Anderson Apolonio Silva Pedroza1, Elenilson M Bernardo1, Allifer R Pereira2, Severina Cassia Andrade Silva3, Talitta A Lima2, Cristiane de Moura Freitas2, Jose Carlos da Silva Junior3, Dayane A Gomes3, Diorginis S Ferreira4, Claudia J Lagranha5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: It has been demonstrated that maternal low protein during development induces mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress in the heart. Moderate-intensity exercise in early life, conversely, increases the overall cardiac health. Thus, we hypothesize that moderate-intensity exercise performed during young age could ameliorate the deleterious effect of maternal protein deprivation on cardiac bioenergetics. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We used a rat model of maternal protein restriction during gestational and lactation period followed by an offspring treadmill moderate physical training. Pregnant rats were divided into two groups: normal nutrition receiving 17% of casein in the diet and undernutrition receiving a low-protein diet (8% casein). At 30 days of age, the male offspring were further subdivided into sedentary (NS and LS) or exercised (NT and LT) groups. Treadmill exercise was performed as follows: 4 weeks, 5 days/week, 60 min/day at 50% of maximal running capacity. Our results showed that a low-protein diet decreases oxidative metabolism and mitochondrial function associated with higher oxidative stress. In contrast, exercise rescues mitochondrial capacity and promotes a cellular resilience to oxidative stress. Up-regulation of cardiac sirtuin 1 and 3 decreased acetylation levels, redeeming from the deleterious effect of protein restriction.
CONCLUSION: Our findings show that moderate daily exercise during a young age acts as a therapeutical intervention opposing the harmful effects of a maternal diet restricted in protein.
Copyright © 2021 The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Childhood exercise; Epigenetic; Heart; Maternal low-protein diet; Oxidative stress

Year:  2021        PMID: 33810953     DOI: 10.1016/j.numecd.2021.01.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis        ISSN: 0939-4753            Impact factor:   4.222


  1 in total

Review 1.  The Role of SIRT3 in Exercise and Aging.

Authors:  Lei Zhou; Ricardo Pinho; Yaodong Gu; Zsolt Radak
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-08-20       Impact factor: 7.666

  1 in total

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