Litcius/Paper detail

Intrinsic and Extrinsic Contributors to the Cardiac Benefits of Exercise

Margaret H. Hastings, Claire Castro, Rebecca Freeman, Azrul Abdul Kadir, Carolin Lerchenmüller, Haobo Li, James Rhee, Jason D. Roh, Kangsan Roh, Anand Prakash Singh, Chao Wu, Peng Xia, Qiulian Zhou, Junjie Xiao, Anthony Rosenzweig

2023JACC Basic to Translational Science30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Among its many cardiovascular benefits, exercise training improves heart function and protects the heart against age-related decline, pathological stress, and injury. Here, we focus on cardiac benefits with an emphasis on more recent updates to our understanding. While the cardiomyocyte continues to play a central role as both a target and effector of exercise's benefits, there is a growing recognition of the important roles of other, noncardiomyocyte lineages and pathways, including some that lie outside the heart itself. We review what is known about mediators of exercise's benefits-both those intrinsic to the heart (at the level of cardiomyocytes, fibroblasts, or vascular cells) and those that are systemic (including metabolism, inflammation, the microbiome, and aging)-highlighting what is known about the molecular mechanisms responsible.

Topics & Concepts

InflammationPathologicalEffectorMedicineCardiac function curveBioinformaticsFunction (biology)Cardiovascular physiologyNeurosciencePsychologyBiologyHeart failureCardiologyInternal medicineImmunologyCell biologyCardiovascular Effects of ExerciseCardiovascular and exercise physiologyCardiovascular Function and Risk Factors