Exercise: a molecular tool to boost muscle growth and mitochondrial performance in heart failure?
Kirsten T NijholtPablo I Sánchez-AguileraSuzanne N VoorripsRudolf A de BoerBerend Daan WestenbrinkPublished in: European journal of heart failure (2022)
Impaired exercise capacity is the key symptom of heart failure (HF) and is associated with reduced quality of life and higher mortality rates. Unfortunately, current therapies, although generally lifesaving, have only small or marginal effects on exercise capacity. Specific strategies to alleviate exercise intolerance may improve quality of life, while possibly improving prognosis as well. There is overwhelming evidence that physical exercise improves performance in cardiac and skeletal muscles in health and disease. Unravelling the mechanistic underpinnings of exercise-induced improvements in muscle function could provide targets that will allow us to boost exercise performance in HF. With the current review we discuss: (i) recently discovered signalling pathways that govern physiological muscle growth as well as mitochondrial quality control mechanisms that underlie metabolic adaptations to exercise; (ii) the mechanistic underpinnings of exercise intolerance in HF and the benefits of exercise in HF patients on molecular, functional and prognostic levels; and (iii) potential molecular therapeutics to improve exercise performance in HF. We propose that novel molecular therapies to boost adaptive muscle growth and mitochondrial quality control in HF should always be combined with some form of exercise training.
Keyphrases
- high intensity
- heart failure
- physical activity
- quality control
- resistance training
- skeletal muscle
- acute heart failure
- healthcare
- public health
- risk assessment
- atrial fibrillation
- cardiovascular disease
- ejection fraction
- mental health
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- small molecule
- coronary artery disease
- body composition
- risk factors
- climate change