Wiley
Browse
Myocardial Apoptosis and MSC with Acute Exercise Paper SUPPLEMENTAL TABLES.docx (28.36 kB)

Dataset for: Myocardial Apoptosis and Mesenchymal Stem Cells with Acute Exercise

Download (28.36 kB)
dataset
posted on 2017-06-02, 11:11 authored by Maria Florencia Arisi, Erica Chirico, Roxanne Sebeny, Geetha Muthukumaran, Anbin Mu, Bart C De Jonghe, Kenneth B Margulies, Joseph R Libonati
Background. Aerobic exercise confers many health benefits. However, numerous reports have shown that acute aerobic exercise can injure the heart. We tested the general hypothesis that acute moderate intensity exercise in rodents induces cardiomyocyte damage and stimulates mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to increase paracrine-mediated protective effects on cardiomyocytes. Methods and Results. A single session of treadmill running (13 m/min, 0% grade, for 45 min) in untrained C57BL/6 male mice (n=18) increased cleaved poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP), a marker of apoptosis, in the myocardium 24 hours post-exercise. Microarray analysis of mouse myocardium identified 11 relevant apoptotic genes and several shifts in matrix remodeling transcripts over the post-exercise window. Post-exercise cardiomyocyte death was recapitulated in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCMs) by culturing cells in 2% plasma harvested from exercised rats. The increased cell death observed in exercise-treated NRCMs was attenuated by β-adrenergic blockade, but not antioxidant treatment. MSC survival, proliferation, and chemotaxis showed no significant differences between sedentary and exercise plasma conditions, despite increased IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β, and IFN-γ secretions from MSCs treated with exercise plasma. NRCM survival was increased nearly 500% when co-cultured with MSCs, but this effect was not altered under exercise plasma culture conditions. Conclusions. Our results suggest acute moderate-intensity aerobic treadmill running in exercise-naïve rodents induces temporal cardiomyocyte death due to plasma-borne factors, namely catecholaminergic stress. Even though exercise conditions prompt an inflammatory response in MSCs, the exercise milieu does not alter the MSC-protective phenotype on cardiomyocytes.

History

collectionID

3771095

Usage metrics

    Physiological Reports

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC