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Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise

Chronic hyperglycemia is associated with low response to aerobic exercise training in rodent models and humans, including reduced aerobic exercise capacity and impaired oxidative remodeling in skeletal muscle. Here, we investigated whether glucose lowering with the sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inh...

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Autores principales: MacDonald, Tara L., Pattamaprapanont, Pattarawan, Cooney, Eileen M., Nava, Roberto C., Mitri, Joanna, Hafida, Samar, Lessard, Sarah J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9044131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35108373
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db21-0934
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author MacDonald, Tara L.
Pattamaprapanont, Pattarawan
Cooney, Eileen M.
Nava, Roberto C.
Mitri, Joanna
Hafida, Samar
Lessard, Sarah J.
author_facet MacDonald, Tara L.
Pattamaprapanont, Pattarawan
Cooney, Eileen M.
Nava, Roberto C.
Mitri, Joanna
Hafida, Samar
Lessard, Sarah J.
author_sort MacDonald, Tara L.
collection PubMed
description Chronic hyperglycemia is associated with low response to aerobic exercise training in rodent models and humans, including reduced aerobic exercise capacity and impaired oxidative remodeling in skeletal muscle. Here, we investigated whether glucose lowering with the sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i), canagliflozin (Cana; 30 mg/kg/day), could restore exercise training response in a model of hyperglycemia (low-dose streptozotocin [STZ]). Cana effectively prevented increased blood glucose in STZ-treated mice. After 6 weeks of voluntary wheel running, Cana-treated mice displayed improvements in aerobic exercise capacity, higher capillary density in striated muscle, and a more oxidative fiber-type in skeletal muscle. In contrast, these responses were blunted or absent in STZ-treated mice. Recent work implicates glucose-induced accumulation of skeletal muscle extracellular matrix (ECM) and hyperactivation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)/SMAD2 mechanical signaling as potential mechanisms underlying poor exercise response. In line with this, muscle ECM accretion was prevented by Cana in STZ-treated mice. JNK/SMAD2 signaling with acute exercise was twofold higher in STZ compared with control but was normalized by Cana. In human participants, ECM accumulation was associated with increased JNK signaling, low VO(2peak), and impaired metabolic health (oral glucose tolerance test–derived insulin sensitivity). These data demonstrate that hyperglycemia-associated impairments in exercise adaptation can be ameliorated by cotherapy with SGLT2i.
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spelling pubmed-90441312022-05-11 Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise MacDonald, Tara L. Pattamaprapanont, Pattarawan Cooney, Eileen M. Nava, Roberto C. Mitri, Joanna Hafida, Samar Lessard, Sarah J. Diabetes Metabolism Chronic hyperglycemia is associated with low response to aerobic exercise training in rodent models and humans, including reduced aerobic exercise capacity and impaired oxidative remodeling in skeletal muscle. Here, we investigated whether glucose lowering with the sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i), canagliflozin (Cana; 30 mg/kg/day), could restore exercise training response in a model of hyperglycemia (low-dose streptozotocin [STZ]). Cana effectively prevented increased blood glucose in STZ-treated mice. After 6 weeks of voluntary wheel running, Cana-treated mice displayed improvements in aerobic exercise capacity, higher capillary density in striated muscle, and a more oxidative fiber-type in skeletal muscle. In contrast, these responses were blunted or absent in STZ-treated mice. Recent work implicates glucose-induced accumulation of skeletal muscle extracellular matrix (ECM) and hyperactivation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)/SMAD2 mechanical signaling as potential mechanisms underlying poor exercise response. In line with this, muscle ECM accretion was prevented by Cana in STZ-treated mice. JNK/SMAD2 signaling with acute exercise was twofold higher in STZ compared with control but was normalized by Cana. In human participants, ECM accumulation was associated with increased JNK signaling, low VO(2peak), and impaired metabolic health (oral glucose tolerance test–derived insulin sensitivity). These data demonstrate that hyperglycemia-associated impairments in exercise adaptation can be ameliorated by cotherapy with SGLT2i. American Diabetes Association 2022-05 2022-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9044131/ /pubmed/35108373 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db21-0934 Text en © 2022 by the American Diabetes Association https://www.diabetesjournals.org/journals/pages/licenseReaders may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. More information is available at https://www.diabetesjournals.org/journals/pages/license.
spellingShingle Metabolism
MacDonald, Tara L.
Pattamaprapanont, Pattarawan
Cooney, Eileen M.
Nava, Roberto C.
Mitri, Joanna
Hafida, Samar
Lessard, Sarah J.
Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title_full Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title_fullStr Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title_full_unstemmed Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title_short Canagliflozin Prevents Hyperglycemia-Associated Muscle Extracellular Matrix Accumulation and Improves the Adaptive Response to Aerobic Exercise
title_sort canagliflozin prevents hyperglycemia-associated muscle extracellular matrix accumulation and improves the adaptive response to aerobic exercise
topic Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9044131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35108373
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db21-0934
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