3.8 Article

Dose-dependent effects of acute exercise on PKC levels in rat heart: is PKC the heart's prophylactic?

Journal

ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA
Volume 178, Issue 2, Pages 97-106

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-201X.2003.01131.x

Keywords

cardioprotection; exercise; mRNA; myocardium; PKC; protein

Categories

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [K01 AG00875] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that chronic exercise is cardioprotective, and recent evidence from our laboratory suggests a key role for protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent pathways, at least in part, as a cellular basis for this response. However, the dose-response relationship linking exercise volume and the time course of isoform-specific PKC activation are poorly understood. Aim: The purpose of this investigation was to determine the effects of acute exercise of varying durations on PKC subcellular distribution and phosphorylation in the rat left ventricle. Methods: Adult (5 months) male Fischer-344 more rats were subjected to a single bout (OB) or 7 days (SB) of treadmill running (n=6/group; 23 m min(-1), 20 min), and compared with sedentary controls (SED; n=8). Hearts were isolated immediately after [early window (EW); n=3/group] or 24 h after the last exercise bout [late window (LW); n=3/group] in OB and SD, respectively. Total PKC and subcellular distribution for the alpha, delta, epsilon, beta I, and beta II isoforms, as well as phosphorylated (phospho-) PKCepsilon (pSer(729)), PKCalpha (pSer(657)) and PKCdelta (pThr(507)) levels were assessed by western blotting. Protein kinase Cepsilon and PKCalpha mRNA levels were assessed by real time polymerase chain reaction. Results: Following OB, PKCbeta I protein levels were reduced, while total phospho-PKCepsilon (pSer(729)), PKCalpha (pSer(657)) and PKCdelta (pThr(507)) levels were increased during EW (P<0.05). Interestingly, total PKCdelta (31%) and membrane-associated PKCalpha (24%) levels decreased from EW to LW (P<0.05). In contrast, SB yielded chronic increases in total PKCepsilon (80.5%) levels and PKCdelta (20.0%) levels (P<0.03), with reversal of effects on phospho-PKCepsilon (Ser(729)), phospho-PKCalpha (Ser(657)) and phospho-PKCdelta (Thr(507)) levels observed with OB. Reductions in total phospho-PKCalpha (Ser(657)) persisted at SB (26.1%; P<0.02). Interestingly, mRNA levels for PKCepsilon were significantly increased following SB while PKCalpha mRNA levels were reduced, respectively. Conclusion: These data suggest that divergent patterns of PKC activation occur following OB and SB at both the transcriptional and translational levels. That similar patterns of PKC translocation are observed in experimental models of ischaemic preconditioning and genetic PKC manipulation provide evidence for a dose-dependent cardioprotective phenotype induced by physical activity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available