The aim of this study was to evaluate whether high-intensity endurance training would alleviate exercise-induced oxidative stress. Nine untrained male subjects (aged 19-21 years) participated in a 12-week training programme, and performed an acute period of exhausting exercise on a cycle ergometer before and after training. The training programme consisted of running at 80% maximal exercise heart rate for 60 min.day-1, 5 days.week-1 for 12 weeks. Blood samples were collected at rest and immediately after exhausting exercise for measurements of indices of oxidative stress, and antioxidant enzyme activities [superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), and catalase (CAT)] in the erythrocytes. Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) increased significantly (P < 0.001) after training, indicating an improvement in aerobic capacity. A period of exhausting exercise caused an increase (P < 0.01) in the ability to produce neutrophil superoxide anion (O2.-) both before and after endurance training, but the magnitude of the increase was smaller after training (P < 0.05). There was a significant increase in lipid peroxidation in the erythrocyte membrane, but not in oxidative protein, after exhausting exercise, however training attenuated this effect. At rest, SOD and GPX activities were increased after training. However, there was no evidence that exhausting exercise enhanced the levels of any antioxidant enzyme activity. The CAT activity was unchanged either by training or by exhausting exercise. These results indicate that high-intensity endurance training can elevate antioxidant enzyme activities in erythrocytes, and decrease neutrophil O2.- production in response to exhausting exercise. Furthermore, this up-regulation in antioxidant defences was accompanied by a reduction in exercise-induced lipid peroxidation in erythrocyte membrane.
Coronavirus disease 2019 , an infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has now spread globally. Some patients develop severe complications including multiple organ failure. It has been suggested that excessive inflammation associated with the disease plays major role in the severity and mortality of COVID-19. To elucidate the inflammatory mechanisms involved in COVID-19, we examined the effects of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein S1 subunit (hereafter S1) on the pro-inflammatory responses in murine and human macrophages. Murine peritoneal exudate macrophages produced pro-inflammatory mediators in response to S1 exposure. Exposure to S1 also activated nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling pathways. Pro-inflammatory cytokine induction by S1 was suppressed by selective inhibitors of NF-κB and JNK pathways. Treatment of murine peritoneal exudate macrophages and human THP-1 cell-derived macrophages with a toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) antagonist attenuated pro-inflammatory cytokine induction and the activation of intracellular signaling by S1 and lipopolysaccharide. Similar results were obtained in experiments using TLR4 siRNA-transfected murine RAW264.7 macrophages. In contrast, TLR2 neutralizing antibodies could not abrogate the S1-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine induction in either RAW264.7 or THP-1 cellderived macrophages. These results suggest that SARS-CoV-2 spike protein S1 subunit activates TLR4 signaling to induce pro-inflammatory responses in murine and human macrophages. Therefore, TLR4 signaling in macrophages may be a potential target for regulating excessive inflammation in COVID-19 patients.
Disruption of the circadian rhythm is a contributory factor to clinical and pathophysiological conditions, including cancer, the metabolic syndrome, and inflammation. Chronic and systemic inflammation are a potential trigger of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease and are caused by the infiltration of large numbers of inflammatory macrophages into tissue. Although recent studies identified the circadian clock gene Rev-erbα, a member of the orphan nuclear receptors, as a key mediator between clockwork and inflammation, the molecular mechanism remains unknown. In this study, we demonstrate that Rev-erbα modulates the inflammatory function of macrophages through the direct regulation of Ccl2 expression. Clinical conditions associated with chronic and systemic inflammation, such as aging or obesity, dampened Rev-erbα gene expression in peritoneal macrophages from C57BL/6J mice. Rev-erbα agonists or overexpression of Rev-erbα in the murine macrophage cell line RAW264 suppressed the induction of Ccl2 following an LPS endotoxin challenge. We discovered that Rev-erbα represses Ccl2 expression directly through a Rev-erbα–binding motif in the Ccl2 promoter region. Rev-erbα also suppressed CCL2-activated signals, ERK and p38, which was recovered by the addition of exogenous CCL2. Further, Rev-erbα impaired cell adhesion and migration, which are inflammatory responses activated through the ERK- and p38-signaling pathways, respectively. Peritoneal macrophages from mice lacking Rev-erbα display increases in Ccl2 expression. These data suggest that Rev-erbα regulates the inflammatory infiltration of macrophages through the suppression of Ccl2 expression. Therefore, Rev-erbα may be a key link between aging- or obesity-associated impairment of clockwork and inflammation.
The expression of uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) was reduced in macrophages after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The physiological consequence and the regulatory mechanisms of the UCP2 down-regulation by LPS were investigated in a macrophage cell line, RAW264 cells. UCP2 overexpression in RAW264 cells transfected with eukaryotic expression vector containing ucp2 cDNA markedly reduced the production of intracellular reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, in the UCP2 transfectant, nitric oxide (NO) synthesis, inducible NO synthase (NOS II) protein, NOS II mRNA, and NOS II promoter activity were definitely decreased after LPS stimulation compared with those in parental RAW264 or RAW264 cells transfected with the vector alone. Reporter assays suggested that an enhancer element was located in the region of intron 2 of the UCP2 gene and that the UCP2 expression was down-regulated not by the 7.3-kb promoter region but by the 5 region of the UCP2 gene containing two introns. Deletion of intron 2 resulted in the low transcriptional activities and abolishment of the LPS-associated negative regulation. In addition, the mRNA expression of transfected UCP2 was suppressed in RAW264 cells transfected with expression vector containing UCP2 genomic DNA, but was markedly increased in cells transfected with the vector containing UCP2 intronless cDNA. These findings suggest that the LPS-stimulated signals suppress UCP2 expression by interrupting the function of intronic enhancer, leading to an up-regulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species, which activate the signal transduction cascade of NOS II expression, probably to ensure rapid and sufficient cellular responses to a microbial attack. U ncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) is a recently discovered member of the mitochondrial inner membrane carrier family with high homology to the brown adipose tissue-specific proton transporter, UCP1 (1-3). Because the gene ucp2 resides within a region of genetic linkage to obesity (1) and its product UCP2 uncouples respiration (4), a role in energy dissipation has been proposed. Mice lacking Ucp2 after targeted gene disruption, however, are not obese and have a normal response to cold exposure or high-fat diet (5). On the other hand, it has been proposed that UCP2 limits production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by decreasing the mitochondrial membrane potential (6). Indeed, Ucp2 Ϫ/Ϫ mice are resistant to Toxoplasma gondii infection, and macrophages of the mutant mice have higher levels of ROS (5), which are associated with higher cytolytic activity (7). In addition, unlike UCP1, expression of UCP2 teems in spleen, lung, and isolated macrophages (1, 2, 8). These findings suggest a role for UCP2 in immunity or inflammatory responsiveness.Recognition of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is crucial for host antimicrobial defense reactions (9, 10). Nitric oxide (NO) production by the inducible isoform of NO synthase (NOS II) after LPS stimulation plays a pivotal role in numerous and diverse biological functions, in particular, as a principal mediat...
A superoxide dismutase derivative (SM-SOD) that circulates and is bound to albumin with a half-life of 6 h was injected intraperitoneally into rats before exhaustive treadmill running to study its antioxidant scavenging capacity in the plasma and soleus and tibialis muscles. The exercise induced a marked increase in xanthine oxidase activity in plasma and an increase in thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances in the plasma as well as in the soleus and tibialis muscles of nonadministered rats immediately after the exercise. The immunoreactive content and activity of both SOD isoenzymes (Cu,Zn-SOD and Mn-SOD) of the nonadministered rats increased in the soleus and tibialis muscles immediately after running. SM-SOD treatment definitely attenuated the degree of the increase in thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances and xanthine oxidase in all samples examined immediately after exercise. Glutathione peroxidase activity significantly increased in the soleus muscle of nonadministered rats 1 day after running, whereas catalase activity remained unchanged throughout the experimental period. These results suggest that a single bout of exhaustive exercise induces oxidative stress in skeletal muscle of rats and that this oxidative stress can be attenuated by exogenous SM-SOD.
The current study was designed to test the hypothesis that endurance training improves the ability of the diaphragm muscle to resist exercise-induced oxidative stress. Twenty-eight male Wistar rats were assigned to either untrained or trained groups. Trained rats were treadmill-trained for 9 wk. Each group was subdivided into acutely exercised or nonexercised groups. Diaphragm muscle from each rat was analyzed to determine the levels of certain antioxidant enzymes: Mn-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD), Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD), glutathione peroxidase, and catalase. In addition, interleukin-1 and myeloperoxidase levels were determined. Endurance training upregulated all of the antioxidant enzymes. Conversely, acute exercise increased glutathione peroxidase and catalase in untrained rats, while it had no overt effect on any antioxidant enzymes in trained rats. Both Mn-SOD and Cu,Zn-SOD contents and activities were increased with endurance training. However, the mRNA expressions of both forms of SOD did not show any significant change with endurance training. Acute exercise also increased the levels of interleukin-1 and myeloperoxidase in untrained rats but not in trained rats. Moreover, acute exercise significantly increased the ability of neutrophils to produce superoxide, especially in untrained rats. The results from this study demonstrate that endurance training can upregulate certain antioxidant enzyme activities in rat diaphragm muscle, indicating the potential for improvement of the resistance to intracellular reactive oxygen species. The results of this study also suggest that acute exercise may cause oxidative damage in rat diaphragm through the activation of the inflammatory pathway and that endurance training may minimize such an extracellular oxidative stress by acute exercise.
1. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the changes in superoxide dismutase (SOD) isoenzyme (Mn(2+)-SOD and Cu2+, Zn(2+)-SOD) activities, contents and mRNA expressions in rat skeletal muscle during endurance training and a single bout of exercise. 2. Thirty-eight male Wistar rats were divided into untrained (U) and trained (T) groups. The T group rats were treadmill-trained for 9 weeks. The activity, content and mRNA expression of Mn(2+)-SOD and Cu2+, Zn(2+)-SOD were determined in the soleus muscle of each rat. 3. Mn(2+)-SOD activity and content in the T group were significantly higher than in the U group, both at rest (22 and 21%, respectively) and after exercise (24 and 46%, respectively), while a single bout of exercise affected neither the activity nor content of Mn(2+)-SOD in either group. 4. The content of Cu2+,Zn(2+)-SOD in both groups was not different at rest and after exercise, although its activity at rest was significantly higher in the T group than in the U group (by 29%). 5. After exercise, the expression of Mn(2+)-SOD mRNA was markedly attenuated only in the U group (49%); the expression of Cu2+,Zn(2+)-SOD mRNA was not influenced by exercise. 6. Our results suggest that adequate endurance training increases both the activity and content of Mn(2+)-SOD and that untrained rats are rather susceptible to oxidative stress during physical exercise. It thus appears that Mn(2+)-SOD provides a reliable index of physical training. 7. The results obtained in the present study also suggest that muscle has the capacity of responding to training in such a manner as to reduce the potential harm arising from the accumulation of oxygen free radicals resulting from enhanced metabolic activity.
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