Cargando…

The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study

Animal models are widely used in biology and the findings of animal research are traditionally projected to humans. However, recent publications have raised concerns with regard to what extent animals and humans respond similar to physiological stimuli. Original data on direct in vivo comparison bet...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Goutianos, Georgios, Tzioura, Aikaterini, Kyparos, Antonios, Paschalis, Vassilis, Margaritelis, Nikos V, Veskoukis, Aristidis S, Zafeiridis, Andreas, Dipla, Konstantina, Nikolaidis, Michalis G, Vrabas, Ioannis S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4393201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25677548
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12293
_version_ 1782366124346703872
author Goutianos, Georgios
Tzioura, Aikaterini
Kyparos, Antonios
Paschalis, Vassilis
Margaritelis, Nikos V
Veskoukis, Aristidis S
Zafeiridis, Andreas
Dipla, Konstantina
Nikolaidis, Michalis G
Vrabas, Ioannis S
author_facet Goutianos, Georgios
Tzioura, Aikaterini
Kyparos, Antonios
Paschalis, Vassilis
Margaritelis, Nikos V
Veskoukis, Aristidis S
Zafeiridis, Andreas
Dipla, Konstantina
Nikolaidis, Michalis G
Vrabas, Ioannis S
author_sort Goutianos, Georgios
collection PubMed
description Animal models are widely used in biology and the findings of animal research are traditionally projected to humans. However, recent publications have raised concerns with regard to what extent animals and humans respond similar to physiological stimuli. Original data on direct in vivo comparison between animals and humans are scarce and no study has addressed this issue after exercise. We aimed to compare side by side in the same experimental setup rat and human responses to an acute exercise bout of matched intensity and duration. Rats and humans ran on a treadmill at 86% of maximal velocity until exhaustion. Pre and post exercise we measured 30 blood chemistry parameters, which evaluate iron status, lipid profile, glucose regulation, protein metabolism, liver, and renal function. ANOVA indicated that almost all biochemical parameters followed a similar alteration pattern post exercise in rats and humans. In fact, there were only 2/30 significant species × exercise interactions (in testosterone and globulins), indicating different responses to exercise between rats and humans. On the contrary, the main effect of exercise was significant in 15/30 parameters and marginally nonsignificant in other two parameters (copper, P = 0.060 and apolipoprotein B, P = 0.058). Our major finding is that the rat adequately mimics human responses to exercise in those basic blood biochemical parameters reported here. The physiological resemblance of rat and human blood responses after exercise to exhaustion on a treadmill indicates that the use of blood chemistry in rats for exercise physiology research is justified.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4393201
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BlackWell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43932012015-04-20 The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study Goutianos, Georgios Tzioura, Aikaterini Kyparos, Antonios Paschalis, Vassilis Margaritelis, Nikos V Veskoukis, Aristidis S Zafeiridis, Andreas Dipla, Konstantina Nikolaidis, Michalis G Vrabas, Ioannis S Physiol Rep Original Research Animal models are widely used in biology and the findings of animal research are traditionally projected to humans. However, recent publications have raised concerns with regard to what extent animals and humans respond similar to physiological stimuli. Original data on direct in vivo comparison between animals and humans are scarce and no study has addressed this issue after exercise. We aimed to compare side by side in the same experimental setup rat and human responses to an acute exercise bout of matched intensity and duration. Rats and humans ran on a treadmill at 86% of maximal velocity until exhaustion. Pre and post exercise we measured 30 blood chemistry parameters, which evaluate iron status, lipid profile, glucose regulation, protein metabolism, liver, and renal function. ANOVA indicated that almost all biochemical parameters followed a similar alteration pattern post exercise in rats and humans. In fact, there were only 2/30 significant species × exercise interactions (in testosterone and globulins), indicating different responses to exercise between rats and humans. On the contrary, the main effect of exercise was significant in 15/30 parameters and marginally nonsignificant in other two parameters (copper, P = 0.060 and apolipoprotein B, P = 0.058). Our major finding is that the rat adequately mimics human responses to exercise in those basic blood biochemical parameters reported here. The physiological resemblance of rat and human blood responses after exercise to exhaustion on a treadmill indicates that the use of blood chemistry in rats for exercise physiology research is justified. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015-02-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4393201/ /pubmed/25677548 http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12293 Text en © 2015 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Goutianos, Georgios
Tzioura, Aikaterini
Kyparos, Antonios
Paschalis, Vassilis
Margaritelis, Nikos V
Veskoukis, Aristidis S
Zafeiridis, Andreas
Dipla, Konstantina
Nikolaidis, Michalis G
Vrabas, Ioannis S
The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title_full The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title_fullStr The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title_full_unstemmed The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title_short The rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
title_sort rat adequately reflects human responses to exercise in blood biochemical profile: a comparative study
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4393201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25677548
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12293
work_keys_str_mv AT goutianosgeorgios theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT tziouraaikaterini theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT kyparosantonios theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT paschalisvassilis theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT margaritelisnikosv theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT veskoukisaristidiss theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT zafeiridisandreas theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT diplakonstantina theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT nikolaidismichalisg theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT vrabasioanniss theratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT goutianosgeorgios ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT tziouraaikaterini ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT kyparosantonios ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT paschalisvassilis ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT margaritelisnikosv ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT veskoukisaristidiss ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT zafeiridisandreas ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT diplakonstantina ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT nikolaidismichalisg ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy
AT vrabasioanniss ratadequatelyreflectshumanresponsestoexerciseinbloodbiochemicalprofileacomparativestudy