| Literature DB >> 33864493 |
Richard S Metcalfe1, Rachael Kemp2, Shane M Heffernan2, Rachel Churm2, Yung-Chih Chen3, José S Ruffino4, Gillian E Conway5, Giusy Tornillo6, Samuel T Orange7.
Abstract
Regular physical activity reduces the risk of several site-specific cancers in humans and suppresses tumour growth in animal models. The mechanisms through which exercise reduces tumour growth remain incompletely understood, but an intriguing and accumulating body of evidence suggests that the incubation of cancer cells with post-exercise serum can have powerful effects on key hallmarks of cancer cell behaviour in vitro. This suggests that exercise can impact tumour biology through direct changes in circulating proteins, RNA molecules and metabolites. Here, we provide a comprehensive narrative overview of what is known about the effects of exercise-conditioned sera on in vitro cancer cell behaviour. In doing so, we consider the key limitations of the current body of literature, both from the perspective of exercise physiology and cancer biology, and we discuss the potential in vivo physiological relevance of these findings. We propose key opportunities for future research in an area that has the potential to identify key anti-oncogenic protein targets and optimise physical activity recommendations for cancer prevention, treatment and survivorship.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer cell apoptosis; Cancer cell growth; Cancer cell proliferation; Cancer prevention; Cancer therapy; Exercise; Exercise-conditioned serum; Physical activity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33864493 PMCID: PMC8260517 DOI: 10.1007/s00421-021-04680-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Appl Physiol ISSN: 1439-6319 Impact factor: 3.078
Fig. 1Forest plot showing the pooled effect of serum collected immediately post exercise on cancer cell proliferation. Figure
reproduced from Orange et al. (2021), distributed under an open access Creative Common CC BY license
Map of post-exercise effects on cancer cell viability / growth
| Study | Participants | Cancer cell line | Exercise bout | Post-exercise time point | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1-h | 2-h | 4-h | 24-h | ||||
| Baldelli et al. ( | Young and healthy males and females ( | LNCaP (prostate) and MDA-MB-231 (breast) | Cycling. Progressive aerobic (4 × 5-min at 50%, 55%, 60%, 70% | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ||
| Dethlefsen et al. ( | Middle-aged women with breast cancer ( | MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 (breast) | 30 min warm up followed by 60 min of whole-body resistance exercise and 30 min of HIIE cycling (80–85% HRmax). No other details provided | ↓ | ||||
| Dethlefsen et al. ( | Young healthy females ( | MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 (breast) | Moderate intensity continuous cycling (2-h at 55% VO2max) | ↓ | ||||
| Devin et al. ( | Male colon cancer survivors ( | CaCO-2 and LoVo (colon) | HIIE cycling (4 × 4 min at 85–95% HRmax) | ↓ | ↔ | |||
| Hwang et al. ( | Healthy young males ( | PC3 and LNCaP (prostate) | Moderate intensity continuous cycling (20-min at 50% VO2max followed by 45-min at 65% VO2max) | ↓ | ||||
| Healthy older males ( | PC3 and LNCaP (prostate) | Moderate intensity continuous cycling (20-min at 50% VO2max followed by 45-min at 65% VO2max) | ↔ | |||||
| Kurgan et al. ( | Healthy young males ( | A549 (lung) | HIIE cycling (6 × 1-min at 90% | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ||
| Rundqvist et al. ( | Young healthy males ( | LNCaP (colon) | Moderate intensity continuous cycling (20-min at 50% VO2max followed by 40-min at 65% VO2max) | ↓ | ||||
Wmax maximal power output achieved during an incremental exercise test to volitional exhaustion, HIIE High-intensity interval exercise, HRmax maximal heart rate
↓Decreased cancer cell viability/growth; ↔ , no change in cancer cell viability /growth
Fig. 2Acute-exercise-conditioned serum inhibits signalling pathways involved in cell proliferation. Increased proliferation in cancer cells is underpinned by mutations in highly conserved signalling networks that are involved in cell growth and division. Exposure of cancer cells to acute-exercise-conditioned serum has been shown to alter phosphorylation of proteins in these signalling pathways in a way that reduces cell proliferation. For example, exercise-conditioned serum was shown to reduce phosphorylation of Akt, mTOR, p70s6k and Erk 1/2 in human lung cancer cells (22). In addition, post-exercise serum has been suggested to support the Hippo tumour suppressor pathway (which involves activation of MST and LATS1/2) by inhibiting YAP/TAZ in human breast cancer cells (18); although, further studies are required to determine this since similar results were not observed in other cancer cell types (e.g. colon cancer cells (18)). Figure
adapted from Kurgen et al. (2017) and reproduced under an open access Creative Common CC BY license
Fig. 3Summary of the effect of acute-exercise- vs chronic-exercise-conditioned serum on human cancer cell biology. In humans, acute exercise serum (collected 0–24 h post exercise) induces serological changes that suppress cancer cell growth but that do not appear to induce apoptosis in vitro. In comparison, there appears to be no effect of exercise-training-conditioned serum (collected > 24 h post chronic exercise, when the acute effects of the last bout of exercise have subsided) on cancer cell proliferation
Fig. 4A roadmap of key research opportunities on exercise-conditioned serum and cancer cell behaviour