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Hepatic Metabolic Profiling of Lifelong Exercise Training Rats.

Dimitra DiamantidouOlga DedaIoannis ZervosIoannis TaitzoglouHelen G GikaGeorgios A TheodoridisFilippos Michopoulos
Published in: Journal of proteome research (2022)
Regular physical exercise has been investigated as a primary preventive measure of several chronic diseases and premature death. Moreover, it has been shown to synchronize responses across multiple organs. In particular, hepatic tissue has proven to be a descriptive matrix to monitor the effect of physical activity. In this study, we performed an untargeted metabolomics-based analysis of hepatic tissue extracts from rats that have undergone either lifelong or chronic exercise training. For this purpose, 56 hepatic samples were collected and were analyzed by UHPLC-TOF-MS in negative ionization mode. This approach involved untargeted metabolite detection on hepatic tissue extracts accompanied by an in-house retention time/accurate mass library enabling confident metabolite identification. Unsupervised (PCA) and supervised (OPLS-DA) multivariate analysis showed significant metabolic perturbation on a panel of 28 metabolites, including amino acids, vitamins, nucleotides, and sugars. The training regime employed in this study resulted in a probable acceleration of the bioenergetic processes (glycolysis, glycogen metabolism), promoted catabolism of purines, and supplied biosynthetic precursors via the pentose phosphate pathway and pentose and glucuronate interconversions. Overall, the applied methodology was able to discriminate the different training schedules based on the rat liver metabolome.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • mass spectrometry
  • machine learning
  • ms ms
  • skeletal muscle
  • amino acid
  • oxidative stress
  • liquid chromatography
  • single cell
  • virtual reality
  • data analysis
  • solid phase extraction
  • high speed