Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to confirm the positive effects on the inflammatory expression and functional changes of blood vessels by aerobic exercise training and dietary control in high-fat diet induced obese rats. METHODS Forty 10-week-old male Wistar rats were treated with high-fat...

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Main Author: Kijin Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asian Society of Kinesiology 2020-04-01
Series:The Asian Journal of Kinesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ajkinesiol.org/upload/pdf/ajk-2020-22-2-30.pdf
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spelling doaj-3916f465bb9d470f82e2c2a6d74bb7bb2020-11-25T03:24:00ZengAsian Society of KinesiologyThe Asian Journal of Kinesiology2586-55952586-55522020-04-01222303810.15758/ajk.2020.22.2.30474Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese RatsKijin Kim0 Department of Physical Education, College of Physical Education, Keimyung University, KoreaOBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to confirm the positive effects on the inflammatory expression and functional changes of blood vessels by aerobic exercise training and dietary control in high-fat diet induced obese rats. METHODS Forty 10-week-old male Wistar rats were treated with high-fat diet for 6 weeks, followed by 4 groups as sedentary + chow diet group (Chow), sedentary + high fat diet group (HFD), exercise + chow diet group (Chow-Ex), high fat diet + Exercise group (HFD-Ex) after obesity induction. After treadmill running exercise and dietary treatment were performed for 8 weeks, body composition, endurance performance and muscular endurance, blood glucose, CRP, NO, insulin, eNOS, iNOS, protein expression of IL-6 and TNF-α in aortic vascular tissues was analyzed. RESULTS High-fat diet intake leads to an increase in body weight and visceral fat, an increase in insulin resistance and an increase in inflammation factors. The blood NO level was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. Blood insulin levels were significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD group without exercise than in all other groups. Blood eNOS activity was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. The expression level of IL-6 protein in the vascular tissues was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD group without exercise than the other groups. The expression level of TNF-α was significantly lower (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study confirmed that exercise training through aerobic exercise and dietary control may help to reduce inflammatory expression and improve vascular endothelial function in high-fat diet induced obese rats.http://ajkinesiol.org/upload/pdf/ajk-2020-22-2-30.pdfexercise trainingnitric oxideobesityvascular inflammation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kijin Kim
spellingShingle Kijin Kim
Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
The Asian Journal of Kinesiology
exercise training
nitric oxide
obesity
vascular inflammation
author_facet Kijin Kim
author_sort Kijin Kim
title Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
title_short Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
title_full Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
title_fullStr Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Exercise Training on Vascular Inflammatory Markers in High-fat Diet-induced Obese Rats
title_sort effects of exercise training on vascular inflammatory markers in high-fat diet-induced obese rats
publisher Asian Society of Kinesiology
series The Asian Journal of Kinesiology
issn 2586-5595
2586-5552
publishDate 2020-04-01
description OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to confirm the positive effects on the inflammatory expression and functional changes of blood vessels by aerobic exercise training and dietary control in high-fat diet induced obese rats. METHODS Forty 10-week-old male Wistar rats were treated with high-fat diet for 6 weeks, followed by 4 groups as sedentary + chow diet group (Chow), sedentary + high fat diet group (HFD), exercise + chow diet group (Chow-Ex), high fat diet + Exercise group (HFD-Ex) after obesity induction. After treadmill running exercise and dietary treatment were performed for 8 weeks, body composition, endurance performance and muscular endurance, blood glucose, CRP, NO, insulin, eNOS, iNOS, protein expression of IL-6 and TNF-α in aortic vascular tissues was analyzed. RESULTS High-fat diet intake leads to an increase in body weight and visceral fat, an increase in insulin resistance and an increase in inflammation factors. The blood NO level was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. Blood insulin levels were significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD group without exercise than in all other groups. Blood eNOS activity was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. The expression level of IL-6 protein in the vascular tissues was significantly higher (p <0.05) in the HFD group without exercise than the other groups. The expression level of TNF-α was significantly lower (p <0.05) in the HFD and Chow groups than in the non-exercise group. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study confirmed that exercise training through aerobic exercise and dietary control may help to reduce inflammatory expression and improve vascular endothelial function in high-fat diet induced obese rats.
topic exercise training
nitric oxide
obesity
vascular inflammation
url http://ajkinesiol.org/upload/pdf/ajk-2020-22-2-30.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kijinkim effectsofexercisetrainingonvascularinflammatorymarkersinhighfatdietinducedobeserats
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