Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men

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Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men. / Olesen, Jesper; Gliemann Hybholt, Lasse; Biensøe, Rasmus S; Schmidt, Jakob Friis; Hellsten, Ylva; Pilegaard, Henriette.

In: Journal of Physiology, Vol. 592, No. 8, 2014, p. 1873-1886.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Olesen, J, Gliemann Hybholt, L, Biensøe, RS, Schmidt, JF, Hellsten, Y & Pilegaard, H 2014, 'Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men', Journal of Physiology, vol. 592, no. 8, pp. 1873-1886. https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256

APA

Olesen, J., Gliemann Hybholt, L., Biensøe, R. S., Schmidt, J. F., Hellsten, Y., & Pilegaard, H. (2014). Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men. Journal of Physiology, 592(8), 1873-1886. https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256

Vancouver

Olesen J, Gliemann Hybholt L, Biensøe RS, Schmidt JF, Hellsten Y, Pilegaard H. Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men. Journal of Physiology. 2014;592(8):1873-1886. https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256

Author

Olesen, Jesper ; Gliemann Hybholt, Lasse ; Biensøe, Rasmus S ; Schmidt, Jakob Friis ; Hellsten, Ylva ; Pilegaard, Henriette. / Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men. In: Journal of Physiology. 2014 ; Vol. 592, No. 8. pp. 1873-1886.

Bibtex

@article{6c8f26ba7a1a47ef8f982d1f98993a14,
title = "Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men",
abstract = "Aim: To investigate the metabolic and anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol alone and when combined with exercise training in skeletal muscle of aged human subjects. Material and Methods: Healthy physically inactive men (60-72 year old) were randomized into either 8 weeks of daily intake of 250 mg resveratrol or placebo or into 8 weeks of high intensity exercise training with 250 mg resveratrol or placebo. Before and after the interventions, resting blood samples and muscle biopsies were obtained and a one-leg knee-extensor endurance exercise test (KEE) was performed. Results: Exercise training increased skeletal muscle PGC-1α mRNA ~1.5-fold, cytochrome c protein ~1.3 fold, cytochrome c oxidase I protein ~1.5-fold, citrate synthase activity ~1.3-fold, 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity ~1.3-fold, IκB-α and IκB-β protein content ~1.3-fold and time to exhaustion in KEE by ~1.2-fold with no significant additive or adverse effects of resveratrol on these parameters. Despite an overall ~25% reduction in total acetylation level in skeletal muscle with resveratrol, no exclusive resveratrol-mediated metabolic effects were observed on the investigated parameters. Notably however, resveratrol blunted an exercise training-induced decrease (~20%) in protein carbonylation and decrease (~40%) in TNFα mRNA content in skeletal muscle. Conclusion: Resveratrol did not elicit metabolic improvements in healthy aged subjects; in fact resveratrol even impaired the observed exercise training-induced improvements in markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in skeletal muscle. Collectively this highlights the metabolic efficacy of exercise training in aged subjects and do not support that resveratrol is a potential exercise mimetic in healthy aged subjects.",
author = "Jesper Olesen and {Gliemann Hybholt}, Lasse and Biens{\o}e, {Rasmus S} and Schmidt, {Jakob Friis} and Ylva Hellsten and Henriette Pilegaard",
note = "CURIS 2014 NEXS 048",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256",
language = "English",
volume = "592",
pages = "1873--1886",
journal = "The Journal of Physiology",
issn = "0022-3751",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exercise training, but not resveratrol, improves metabolic and inflammatory status in skeletal muscle of aged men

AU - Olesen, Jesper

AU - Gliemann Hybholt, Lasse

AU - Biensøe, Rasmus S

AU - Schmidt, Jakob Friis

AU - Hellsten, Ylva

AU - Pilegaard, Henriette

N1 - CURIS 2014 NEXS 048

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Aim: To investigate the metabolic and anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol alone and when combined with exercise training in skeletal muscle of aged human subjects. Material and Methods: Healthy physically inactive men (60-72 year old) were randomized into either 8 weeks of daily intake of 250 mg resveratrol or placebo or into 8 weeks of high intensity exercise training with 250 mg resveratrol or placebo. Before and after the interventions, resting blood samples and muscle biopsies were obtained and a one-leg knee-extensor endurance exercise test (KEE) was performed. Results: Exercise training increased skeletal muscle PGC-1α mRNA ~1.5-fold, cytochrome c protein ~1.3 fold, cytochrome c oxidase I protein ~1.5-fold, citrate synthase activity ~1.3-fold, 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity ~1.3-fold, IκB-α and IκB-β protein content ~1.3-fold and time to exhaustion in KEE by ~1.2-fold with no significant additive or adverse effects of resveratrol on these parameters. Despite an overall ~25% reduction in total acetylation level in skeletal muscle with resveratrol, no exclusive resveratrol-mediated metabolic effects were observed on the investigated parameters. Notably however, resveratrol blunted an exercise training-induced decrease (~20%) in protein carbonylation and decrease (~40%) in TNFα mRNA content in skeletal muscle. Conclusion: Resveratrol did not elicit metabolic improvements in healthy aged subjects; in fact resveratrol even impaired the observed exercise training-induced improvements in markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in skeletal muscle. Collectively this highlights the metabolic efficacy of exercise training in aged subjects and do not support that resveratrol is a potential exercise mimetic in healthy aged subjects.

AB - Aim: To investigate the metabolic and anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol alone and when combined with exercise training in skeletal muscle of aged human subjects. Material and Methods: Healthy physically inactive men (60-72 year old) were randomized into either 8 weeks of daily intake of 250 mg resveratrol or placebo or into 8 weeks of high intensity exercise training with 250 mg resveratrol or placebo. Before and after the interventions, resting blood samples and muscle biopsies were obtained and a one-leg knee-extensor endurance exercise test (KEE) was performed. Results: Exercise training increased skeletal muscle PGC-1α mRNA ~1.5-fold, cytochrome c protein ~1.3 fold, cytochrome c oxidase I protein ~1.5-fold, citrate synthase activity ~1.3-fold, 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity ~1.3-fold, IκB-α and IκB-β protein content ~1.3-fold and time to exhaustion in KEE by ~1.2-fold with no significant additive or adverse effects of resveratrol on these parameters. Despite an overall ~25% reduction in total acetylation level in skeletal muscle with resveratrol, no exclusive resveratrol-mediated metabolic effects were observed on the investigated parameters. Notably however, resveratrol blunted an exercise training-induced decrease (~20%) in protein carbonylation and decrease (~40%) in TNFα mRNA content in skeletal muscle. Conclusion: Resveratrol did not elicit metabolic improvements in healthy aged subjects; in fact resveratrol even impaired the observed exercise training-induced improvements in markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in skeletal muscle. Collectively this highlights the metabolic efficacy of exercise training in aged subjects and do not support that resveratrol is a potential exercise mimetic in healthy aged subjects.

U2 - 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256

DO - 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.270256

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24514907

VL - 592

SP - 1873

EP - 1886

JO - The Journal of Physiology

JF - The Journal of Physiology

SN - 0022-3751

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 99120352