PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Effects of exercise training on circulating and skeletal muscle renin-angiotensin system in chronic heart failure rats.

  • Igor Lucas Gomes-Santos,
  • Tiago Fernandes,
  • Gisele Kruger Couto,
  • Julio César Ayres Ferreira-Filho,
  • Vera Maria Cury Salemi,
  • Fernanda Barrinha Fernandes,
  • Dulce Elena Casarini,
  • Patricia Chakur Brum,
  • Luciana Venturini Rossoni,
  • Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira,
  • Carlos Eduardo Negrao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
p. e98012

Abstract

Read online

BACKGROUND: Accumulated evidence shows that the ACE-AngII-AT1 axis of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is markedly activated in chronic heart failure (CHF). Recent studies provide information that Angiotensin (Ang)-(1-7), a metabolite of AngII, counteracts the effects of AngII. However, this balance between AngII and Ang-(1-7) is still little understood in CHF. We investigated the effects of exercise training on circulating and skeletal muscle RAS in the ischemic model of CHF. METHODS/MAIN RESULTS: Male Wistar rats underwent left coronary artery ligation or a Sham operation. They were divided into four groups: 1) Sedentary Sham (Sham-S), 2) exercise-trained Sham (Sham-Ex), sedentary CHF (CHF-S), and exercise-trained CHF (CHF-Ex). Angiotensin concentrations and ACE and ACE2 activity in the circulation and skeletal muscle (soleus and plantaris) were quantified. Skeletal muscle ACE and ACE2 protein expression, and AT1, AT2, and Mas receptor gene expression were also evaluated. CHF reduced ACE2 serum activity. Exercise training restored ACE2 and reduced ACE activity in CHF. Exercise training reduced plasma AngII concentration in both Sham and CHF rats and increased the Ang-(1-7)/AngII ratio in CHF rats. CHF and exercise training did not change skeletal muscle ACE and ACE2 activity and protein expression. CHF increased AngII levels in both soleus and plantaris muscle, and exercise training normalized them. Exercise training increased Ang-(1-7) in the plantaris muscle of CHF rats. The AT1 receptor was only increased in the soleus muscle of CHF rats, and exercise training normalized it. Exercise training increased the expression of the Mas receptor in the soleus muscle of both exercise-trained groups, and normalized it in plantaris muscle. CONCLUSIONS: Exercise training causes a shift in RAS towards the Ang-(1-7)-Mas axis in skeletal muscle, which can be influenced by skeletal muscle metabolic characteristics. The changes in RAS circulation do not necessarily reflect the changes occurring in the RAS of skeletal muscle.