Physiological Reports (Jan 2023)

Physical inactivity by tail suspension alters markers of metabolism, structure, and autophagy of the mouse heart

  • Ana Victoria Rojo‐García,
  • Mathias Vanmunster,
  • Alexander Pacolet,
  • Frank Suhr

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.15574
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Sedentary behavior has become ingrained in our society and has been linked to cardiovascular diseases. Physical inactivity is the main characteristic of sedentary behavior. However, its impact on cardiovascular disease is not clear. Therefore, we investigated the effect of physical inactivity in an established mouse model on gene clusters associated with cardiac fibrosis, electrophysiology, cell regeneration, and tissue degradation/turnover. We investigated a sedentary group (CTR, n = 10) versus a tail suspension group (TS, n = 11) that caused hindlimb unloading and consequently physical inactivity. Through histological, protein content, and transcript analysis approaches, we found that cardiac fibrosis‐related genes partly change, with significant TS‐associated increases in Tgfb1, but without changes in Col1a1 and Fn1. These changes are not translated into fibrosis at tissue level. We further detected TS‐mediated increases in protein degradation‐ (Trim63, p < 0.001; Fbxo32, p = 0.0947 as well as in biosynthesis‐related [P70s6kb1, p < 0.01]). Corroborating these results, we found increased expression of autophagy markers such as Atg7 (p < 0.01) and ULK1 (p < 0.05). Two cardiomyocyte regeneration‐ and sarcomerogenesis‐related genes, Yap (p = 0.0535) and Srf (p < 0.001), increased upon TS compared to CTR conditions. Finally, we found significant upregulation of Gja1 (p < 0.05) and a significant downregulation of Aqp1 (p < 0.05). Our data demonstrate that merely 2 weeks of reduced physical activity induce changes in genes associated with cardiac structure and electrophysiology. Hence, these data should find the basis for novel research directed to evaluate the interplay of cardiac functioning and physical inactivity.

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