Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats
Obesity is an epidemic disease and the expansion of adipose tissue, especially visceral fat, promotes the secretion of factors that lead to comorbidities such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Thus, diet and exercise have been proposed as an intervention to reverse these complications. An adi...
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Frontiers Media S.A.
2021-08-01
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Online Access: | https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.564963/full |
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record_format |
Article |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Vanessa de Oliveira Furino João Manoel Alves Diego Adorna Marine Marcela Sene-Fiorese Carla Nascimento dos Santos Rodrigues Cristina Arrais-Lima Stela Márcia Mattiello Cynthia Aparecida de Castro Ricardo Carneiro Borra Marina Campos Rocha Iran Malavazi Ana Cláudia Garcia de Oliveira Duarte |
spellingShingle |
Vanessa de Oliveira Furino João Manoel Alves Diego Adorna Marine Marcela Sene-Fiorese Carla Nascimento dos Santos Rodrigues Cristina Arrais-Lima Stela Márcia Mattiello Cynthia Aparecida de Castro Ricardo Carneiro Borra Marina Campos Rocha Iran Malavazi Ana Cláudia Garcia de Oliveira Duarte Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats Frontiers in Physiology body composition endurance training visceral adipose tissue high-fat diet obesity irisin/FNDC5 |
author_facet |
Vanessa de Oliveira Furino João Manoel Alves Diego Adorna Marine Marcela Sene-Fiorese Carla Nascimento dos Santos Rodrigues Cristina Arrais-Lima Stela Márcia Mattiello Cynthia Aparecida de Castro Ricardo Carneiro Borra Marina Campos Rocha Iran Malavazi Ana Cláudia Garcia de Oliveira Duarte |
author_sort |
Vanessa de Oliveira Furino |
title |
Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats |
title_short |
Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats |
title_full |
Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats |
title_fullStr |
Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese Rats |
title_sort |
dietary intervention, when not associated with exercise, upregulates irisin/fndc5 while reducing visceral adiposity markers in obese rats |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Physiology |
issn |
1664-042X |
publishDate |
2021-08-01 |
description |
Obesity is an epidemic disease and the expansion of adipose tissue, especially visceral fat, promotes the secretion of factors that lead to comorbidities such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Thus, diet and exercise have been proposed as an intervention to reverse these complications. An adipocytokine, known as irisin, mediates the beneficial effects of exercise. It has been proposed as a therapeutic potential in controlling obesity. In view of the above, this paper attempts to determine the modulation of irisin, visceral adiposity and biochemical markers in response to dietary intervention and aerobic exercise. To do this, 52 diet-induced obese male Wistar rats were divided into the following four groups: high-fat diet and exercise (HFD-Ex); HFD-Sedentary (HFD-Sed); chow-diet and exercise (CD-Exercise); and CD-Sed. The exercise-trained group performed a treadmill protocol for 60 min/day, 3 days/week for 8 weeks. Body mass (BM), body fat (BF), fat mass (FM), and fat-free mass (FFM) were analyzed. Mesenteric (MES), epididymal (EPI), and retroperitoneal (RET) adipose tissue was collected and histological analysis was performed. Biochemical irisin, triglycerides, glucose, insulin and inflammatory markers were determined and, FNDC5 protein expression was analyzed. In this study, the diet was the most important factor in reducing visceral adiposity in the short and long term. Exercise was an important factor in preserving muscle mass and reducing visceral depots after a long term. Moreover, the combination of diet and exercise can enhance these effects. Diet and exercise exclusively were the factors capable of increasing the values of irisin/FNDC5, however it did not bring cumulative effects of both interventions. Prescriptions to enhance the obesity treatments should involve reducing visceral adiposity by reducing the fat content in the diet associated with aerobic exercise. |
topic |
body composition endurance training visceral adipose tissue high-fat diet obesity irisin/FNDC5 |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.564963/full |
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doaj-a8c9c0747324423d8293ef2498ab521b2021-08-13T06:26:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2021-08-011210.3389/fphys.2021.564963564963Dietary Intervention, When Not Associated With Exercise, Upregulates Irisin/FNDC5 While Reducing Visceral Adiposity Markers in Obese RatsVanessa de Oliveira Furino0João Manoel Alves1Diego Adorna Marine2Marcela Sene-Fiorese3Carla Nascimento dos Santos Rodrigues4Cristina Arrais-Lima5Stela Márcia Mattiello6Cynthia Aparecida de Castro7Ricardo Carneiro Borra8Marina Campos Rocha9Iran Malavazi10Ana Cláudia Garcia de Oliveira Duarte11Department of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physiotherapy – DFisio-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physiotherapy – DFisio-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Morphology and Pathology-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Genetics and Evolution-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Genetics and Evolution-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Genetics and Evolution-Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Physical Education and Human Motricity – DEFMH, Biological and Health Sciences Center – CCBS, Federal University of São Carlos – UFSCar, São Carlos, BrazilObesity is an epidemic disease and the expansion of adipose tissue, especially visceral fat, promotes the secretion of factors that lead to comorbidities such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Thus, diet and exercise have been proposed as an intervention to reverse these complications. An adipocytokine, known as irisin, mediates the beneficial effects of exercise. It has been proposed as a therapeutic potential in controlling obesity. In view of the above, this paper attempts to determine the modulation of irisin, visceral adiposity and biochemical markers in response to dietary intervention and aerobic exercise. To do this, 52 diet-induced obese male Wistar rats were divided into the following four groups: high-fat diet and exercise (HFD-Ex); HFD-Sedentary (HFD-Sed); chow-diet and exercise (CD-Exercise); and CD-Sed. The exercise-trained group performed a treadmill protocol for 60 min/day, 3 days/week for 8 weeks. Body mass (BM), body fat (BF), fat mass (FM), and fat-free mass (FFM) were analyzed. Mesenteric (MES), epididymal (EPI), and retroperitoneal (RET) adipose tissue was collected and histological analysis was performed. Biochemical irisin, triglycerides, glucose, insulin and inflammatory markers were determined and, FNDC5 protein expression was analyzed. In this study, the diet was the most important factor in reducing visceral adiposity in the short and long term. Exercise was an important factor in preserving muscle mass and reducing visceral depots after a long term. Moreover, the combination of diet and exercise can enhance these effects. Diet and exercise exclusively were the factors capable of increasing the values of irisin/FNDC5, however it did not bring cumulative effects of both interventions. Prescriptions to enhance the obesity treatments should involve reducing visceral adiposity by reducing the fat content in the diet associated with aerobic exercise.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.564963/fullbody compositionendurance trainingvisceral adipose tissuehigh-fat dietobesityirisin/FNDC5 |