4.4 Article

Metabolic and molecular responses of human patellar tendon to concentric- and eccentric-type exercise in youth and older age

Journal

GEROSCIENCE
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages 331-344

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11357-022-00636-x

Keywords

Tendon; Protein synthesis; Collagen; D2O; Training

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This study investigates the molecular changes in patellar tendons with ageing and the responses to different exercise types in young and old individuals. The findings suggest that exercise training can increase tendon protein synthesis, but the transcriptional responses differ between age groups and exercise types.
Exercise training can induce adaptive changes to tendon tissue both structurally and mechanically; however, the underlying compositional changes that contribute to these alterations remain uncertain in humans, particularly in the context of the ageing tendon. The aims of the present study were to determine the molecular changes with ageing in patellar tendons in humans, as well as the responses to exercise and exercise type (eccentric (ECC) and concentric (CON)) in young and old patellar tendon. Healthy younger males (age 23.5 +/- 6.1 years; n = 27) and older males (age 68.5 +/- 1.9 years; n = 27) undertook 8 weeks of CON or ECC training (3 times per week; at 60% of 1 repetition maximum (1RM)) or no training. Subjects consumed D2O throughout the protocol and tendon biopsies were collected after 4 and 8 weeks for measurement of fractional synthetic rates (FSR) of tendon protein synthesis and gene expression. There were increases in tendon protein synthesis following 4 weeks of CON and ECC training (P < 0.01; main effect by ANOVA), with no differences observed between young and old males, or training type. At the transcriptional level however, ECC in young adults generally induced greater responses of collagen and extracellular matrix-related genes than CON, while older individuals had reduced gene expression responses to training. Different training types did not appear to induce differential tendon responses in terms of protein synthesis, and while tendons from older adults exhibited different transcriptional responses to younger individuals, protein turnover changes with training were similar for both age groups.

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