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Investigating Skeletal Muscle Metabolic Adaptations underlying Aerobic Fitness Gains following High Intensity Interval Training in a Rat Model of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Abstract

poster abstractRationale: In patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) a shift from oxidative to a less efficient non-oxidative (glycolytic) metabolism in skeletal muscle is believed to contribute to the reduced exercise tolerance hallmark of the disease. As seen for other cardiopulmonary diseases, exercise training (ExT) may ameliorate this “glycolytic switch” in PAH and improve exercise capacity. Previous studies in this lab showed an improved metabolic profile of skeletal muscle in PAH rats following an ExT protocol of continuous running at moderate relative intensity, 60 minutes at 75% of maximal aerobic capacity (VO2 Max). This study tests the hypothesis in a PAH rat model that HIIT will also result in preserved aerobic capacity and attenuation of skeletal muscle glycolytic shift. Methods: Male Sprague-Dawley rats received either monocrotaline (MCT, 40 mg/kg) to induce mild PAH (n= 14), or saline, for healthy controls (n=9). After 2 wks, a 6 wkprogram of treadmill HIIT was initiated for a subset of PAH (n= 8) and healthy controls (n=6). The 30 min HIIT sessions alternated between 2 minutes at 85% VO2 max and 3 minutes at ~30% VO2 max. VO2 max was assessed at baseline, and in pre-training and post-training via analysis of expired gases. Preliminary results: MCT-induced decrement in VO2 max was attenuated by HIIT (p0.05). Western blotting of soleus homogenates for cytochromes I-V of the electron transport chain (OXPHOS), and for PGC1α, a potent stimulus for mitochondrial biogenesis, is being performed at present to further investigate potential training-induced adaptations in skeletal muscle metabolis

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