Antiapoptotic and mitochondrial biogenetic effects of exercise training on ovariectomized hypertensive rat hearts

Author:

Lin Yi-Yuan123ORCID,Hong Yi4,Yu Shao-Hong5,Wu Xu-Bo67,Shyu Woei-Cherng89,Chen Jwo-Sheng10,Ting Hua11,Yang Ai-Lun12,Lee Shin-Da125613ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Rehabilitation Medicine, Weifang Medical University, Shandong, China

2. Department of Physical Therapy, Asia University, Taichung, Taiwan

3. Graduate Institute of Clinical Medical Science, China Medical University, Taichun, Taiwan

4. The First Rehabilitation Hospital of Shanghai, Shanghai, China

5. College of Rehabilitation, Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shandong, China

6. Departmental of Rehabilitation, Seventh People’s Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, China

7. School of Rehabilitation Science, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, China

8. Graduate Institute of Biomedical Sciences, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

9. Translational Medicine Research Center, China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan

10. Department of Sports Medicine, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

11. Center of Sleep Medicine, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Chung-Shan Medical University Hospital, Chung-Shan Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

12. Department of Sports Sciences, University of Taipei, Taipei, Taiwan

13. Department of Physical Therapy, Graduate Institute of Rehabilitation Science, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

Abstract

This study was to investigate the effects of exercise training on antiapoptotic pathways and mitochondrial biogenesis in ovariectomized hypertensive rats. Histopathological analysis, TUNEL assay, and Western blotting were performed on the excised hearts from female spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), which were divided into a sham-operated sedentary hypertensive (SHR-S), a sedentary hypertensive ovariectomized (SHR-O), and hypertensive ovariectomized rats that underwent treadmill exercise training (SHR-OT; 60 min/day, 5 days/wk) for 8 wk, along with normotensive Wistar Kyoto rats (WKY). When compared with the WKY group, the SHR-S group exhibited decreased protein levels of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator-1α (PGC-1α) and mitochondrial OPA-1 (mitochondrial biogenesis) and decreased further in the SHR-O group. The protein levels of p-PI3K, p-Akt, Bcl-2, Bcl-xL (prosurvival pathways), and the protein levels of PGC-1α and mitochondrial OPA1 (mitochondrial biogenesis) were increased in the SHR-OT group, but estrogen receptor (ER)α and ERβ were not changed when compared with the SHR-O group. The protein levels of t-Bid, Bad, Bax, cytosolic cytochrome c, activated caspase 9, and activated caspase 3 (mitochondria-dependent apoptotic pathways), as well as Fas ligand, TNF-α, Fas receptors, Fas-associated death domain, activated caspase 8 (Fas receptor-dependent apoptotic pathways) were decreased in the SHR-OT group, when compared with the SHR-O group. Exercise training protection on the coexistence of hypertension and ovariectomy-induced cardiac mitochondria-dependent and Fas receptor-dependent apoptotic pathways by enhancing the Bcl2-related and mitochondrial biogenetic prosurvival pathways might provide a new therapeutic effect on cardiac protection in oophorectomized early postmenopausal hypertensive women. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Widely dispersed cardiac apoptosis was found in the coexistence of hypertension and ovariectomy. Exercise training on a treadmill could prevent ovariectomized hypertension-induced widely dispersed cardiac apoptosis via mitochondria-dependent apoptotic pathway (t-Bid, Bad, Bax, cytosolic cytochrome c, activated caspase 9, and activated caspase 3) and Fas receptor-dependent apoptotic pathway (Fas ligand, tumor necrosis factor-α, Fas receptors, Fas-associated death domain, activated caspase 8, and activated caspase 3) through enhancing the Bcl2-related (p-PI3K, p-Akt, Bcl-2, Bcl-xL) and mitochondrial biogenetic (PGC-1α and mitochondrial optic atrophy 1) prosurvival pathways.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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