Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).

Physical activity modulates expression of metabolic genes and may therefore be a prerequisite for metabolic responses to environmental stimuli. However, the extent to which exercise interacts with environmental conditions to modulate metabolism is unresolved. Hence, we tested the hypothesis that eve...

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Main Authors: Frank Seebacher, Elsa J Glanville
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2946386?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f53837d83ad44edebb3e28bb937850342020-11-24T21:45:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-09-0159e1302210.1371/journal.pone.0013022Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).Frank SeebacherElsa J GlanvillePhysical activity modulates expression of metabolic genes and may therefore be a prerequisite for metabolic responses to environmental stimuli. However, the extent to which exercise interacts with environmental conditions to modulate metabolism is unresolved. Hence, we tested the hypothesis that even low levels of physical activity are beneficial by improving metabolic responsiveness to temperatures below the thermal neutral zone, thereby increasing the capacity for substrate oxidation and energy expenditure.We used wild rats (Rattus fuscipes) to avoid potential effects of breeding on physiological phenotypes. Exercise acclimation (for 30 min/day on 5 days/week for 30 days at 60% of maximal performance) at 22°C increased mRNA concentrations of PGC1α, PPARδ, and NRF-1 in skeletal muscle and brown adipose tissue compared to sedentary animals. Lowering ambient temperature to 12°C caused further increases in relative expression of NRF-1 in skeletal muscle, and of PPARδ of brown adipose tissue. Surprisingly, relative expression of UCP1 increased only when both exercise and cold stimuli were present. Importantly, in sedentary animals cold acclimation (12°C) alone did not change any of the above variables. Similarly, cold alone did not increase maximum capacity for substrate oxidation in mitochondria (cytochrome c oxidase and citrate synthase activities) of either muscle or brown adipose tissue. Animals that exercised regularly had higher exercise induced metabolic rates in colder environments than sedentary rats, and temperature induced metabolic scope was greater in exercised rats.Physical activity is a necessary prerequisite for the expression of transcriptional regulators that influence a broad range of physiological functions from energy metabolism to cardiovascular function and nutrient uptake. A sedentary lifestyle leads to decreased daily energy expenditure because of a lack of direct use of energy and a muted metabolic response to ambient temperature, which can be reversed even by low levels of physical activity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2946386?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frank Seebacher
Elsa J Glanville
spellingShingle Frank Seebacher
Elsa J Glanville
Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Frank Seebacher
Elsa J Glanville
author_sort Frank Seebacher
title Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
title_short Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
title_full Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
title_fullStr Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
title_full_unstemmed Low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (Rattus fuscipes).
title_sort low levels of physical activity increase metabolic responsiveness to cold in a rat (rattus fuscipes).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Physical activity modulates expression of metabolic genes and may therefore be a prerequisite for metabolic responses to environmental stimuli. However, the extent to which exercise interacts with environmental conditions to modulate metabolism is unresolved. Hence, we tested the hypothesis that even low levels of physical activity are beneficial by improving metabolic responsiveness to temperatures below the thermal neutral zone, thereby increasing the capacity for substrate oxidation and energy expenditure.We used wild rats (Rattus fuscipes) to avoid potential effects of breeding on physiological phenotypes. Exercise acclimation (for 30 min/day on 5 days/week for 30 days at 60% of maximal performance) at 22°C increased mRNA concentrations of PGC1α, PPARδ, and NRF-1 in skeletal muscle and brown adipose tissue compared to sedentary animals. Lowering ambient temperature to 12°C caused further increases in relative expression of NRF-1 in skeletal muscle, and of PPARδ of brown adipose tissue. Surprisingly, relative expression of UCP1 increased only when both exercise and cold stimuli were present. Importantly, in sedentary animals cold acclimation (12°C) alone did not change any of the above variables. Similarly, cold alone did not increase maximum capacity for substrate oxidation in mitochondria (cytochrome c oxidase and citrate synthase activities) of either muscle or brown adipose tissue. Animals that exercised regularly had higher exercise induced metabolic rates in colder environments than sedentary rats, and temperature induced metabolic scope was greater in exercised rats.Physical activity is a necessary prerequisite for the expression of transcriptional regulators that influence a broad range of physiological functions from energy metabolism to cardiovascular function and nutrient uptake. A sedentary lifestyle leads to decreased daily energy expenditure because of a lack of direct use of energy and a muted metabolic response to ambient temperature, which can be reversed even by low levels of physical activity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2946386?pdf=render
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