Publication
Aerobic exercise reduces cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and increases contractility, Ca2+ sensitivity and SERCA-2 in rat after myocardial infarction
Publisher:
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date:
04-2002
DOI:
10.1016/S0008-6363(01)00565-X
Abstract: Although it is generally accepted that endurance training improves cardiac function after myocardial infarction the sub-cellular mechanisms are uncertain. The present study reports the effects of aerobic endurance training on myocardial mass, myocyte dimensions, contractile function, Ca2+ handling, and myofilament responsiveness to Ca2+ in cardiomyocytes from healthy and failing rat hearts. Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats ran on a treadmill 1.5 h/day, 5 days a week for 8 weeks. Exercise intervals alternated between 8 min at 85-90% of V(O(2max)) and 2 min at 50-60%. Training started 4 weeks after ligation of the left coronary artery (TR-INF, n=11) or sham operation (TR-SHAM, n=6). Sedentary animals (SED-SHAM, n=6 SED-INF, n=13) were controls. After 6 weeks V(O(2max)) in TR-INF and TR-SHAM leveled off 65% above sedentary controls. In TR-SHAM, left and right ventricle weights were approximately 25% higher than in SED-SHAM, myocytes were approximately 13% longer width remained unchanged. At physiological stimulation frequencies, relative myocyte shortening was markedly higher whereas peak systolic [Ca2+] and t(1/2) of Ca2+ transient decay were 10-20% lower, indicating higher Ca2+ sensitivity in cardiomyocytes from trained rats, compared to respective controls. In TR-INF the left and right ventricular weights, and myocyte length and width were 15, 23, 12, and 20% less than in SED-INF. Endurance training significantly increased the myocardial SR Ca2+ pump (SERCA-2) and sarcolemmal Na+-Ca2+-exchanger (NCX) protein levels to the extent that TR-INF did not differ from SED-SHAM. This is the first study to show that aerobic endurance training attenuates the ventricular and cellular hypertrophy in failing hearts. Furthermore, training consistently restores contractile function, intracellular Ca2+ handling, and Ca2+-sensitivity in cardiomyocytes from rats with myocardial infarction.