Exercise Reduces the Resumption of Tumor Growth and Proteolytic Pathways in the Skeletal Muscle of Mice Following Chemotherapy.
Edson Alves de LimaAlexandre Abilio de Souza TeixeiraLuana Amorim BiondoTiego Aparecido DinizLoreana Sanches SilveiraDario ColettiSilvia Busquets RiusJose Cesar Rosa NetoPublished in: Cancers (2020)
The pathogenesis of muscle atrophy plays a central role in cancer cachexia, and chemotherapy contributes to this condition. Therefore, the present study aimed to evaluate the effects of endurance exercise on time-dependent muscle atrophy caused by doxorubicin. For this, C57 BL/6 mice were subcutaneously inoculated with Lewis lung carcinoma cells (LLC group). One week after the tumor establishment, a group of these animals initiated the doxorubicin chemotherapy alone (LLC + DOX group) or combined with endurance exercise (LLC + DOX + EXER group). One group of animals was euthanized after the chemotherapy cycle, whereas the remaining animals were euthanized one week after the last administration of doxorubicin. The practice of exercise combined with chemotherapy showed beneficial effects such as a decrease in tumor growth rate after chemotherapy interruption and amelioration of premature death due to doxorubicin toxicity. Moreover, the protein degradation levels in mice undergoing exercise returned to basal levels after chemotherapy; in contrast, the mice treated with doxorubicin alone experienced an increase in the mRNA expression levels of the proteolytic pathways in gastrocnemius muscle (Trim63, Fbxo32, Myostatin, FoxO). Collectively, our results suggest that endurance exercise could be utilized during and after chemotherapy for mitigating muscle atrophy promoted by doxorubicin and avoid the resumption of tumor growth.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- high intensity
- locally advanced
- resistance training
- drug delivery
- physical activity
- cancer therapy
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- healthcare
- squamous cell carcinoma
- primary care
- rectal cancer
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance imaging
- clinical trial
- adipose tissue
- chemotherapy induced
- body composition
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- wild type
- protein protein
- pi k akt