Litcius/Paper detail

The intensity-dependent effects of exercise and superimposing environmental heat stress on autophagy in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from older men

James J. McCormick, Morgan K. McManus, Kelli E. King, Nicholas Goulet, Glen P. Kenny

2023American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

We demonstrate that autophagic stimulation occurs in response to short-duration (30-min) vigorous-intensity exercise in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from older adults; however, no changes in autophagy occur during low- or moderate-intensity exercise. Moreover, older adults exhibit autophagic impairments when the same vigorous-intensity exercise is performed in hot ambient conditions. When paired with an attenuated heat shock response, as well as elevated apoptotic responses, older men may exhibit greater cellular vulnerability to exertional heat stress.

Topics & Concepts

Peripheral blood mononuclear cellAutophagyHeat stressMedicineShock (circulatory)Intensity (physics)Heat shock proteinStimulationPeripheralHeat shockHsp70Peripheral bloodExercise intensityInternal medicineEndocrinologyPhysiologyApoptosisBlood pressureBiologyHeart rateAnimal scienceBiochemistryIn vitroQuantum mechanicsGenePhysicsAutophagy in Disease and TherapyAdipose Tissue and MetabolismHydrogen's biological and therapeutic effects