Exercise training remodels subcutaneous adipose tissue in adults with obesity even without weight loss.
Cheehoon AhnBenjamin J RyanMichael W SchlehPallavi VarshneyAlison C LudzkiJenna B GillenDouglas W Van PeltLisa M PitchfordSuzette M HowtonThomas RodeScott L HummelCharles F BurantJonathan Peter LittleJeffrey F HorowitzPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2022)
Excessive adipose tissue mass underlies much of the metabolic health complications in obesity. Although exercise training is known to improve metabolic health in individuals with obesity, the effects of exercise training without weight loss on adipose tissue structure and metabolic function remain unclear. Thirty-six adults with obesity (body mass index = 33 ± 3 kg · m -2 ) were assigned to 12 weeks (4 days week -1 ) of either moderate-intensity continuous training (MICT; 70% maximal heart rate, 45 min; n = 17) or high-intensity interval training (HIIT; 90% maximal heart rate, 10 × 1 min; n = 19), maintaining their body weight throughout. Abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (aSAT) biopsy samples were collected once before and twice after training (1 day after last exercise and again 4 days later). Exercise training modified aSAT morphology (i.e. reduced fat cell size, increased collagen type 5a3, both P ≤ 0.05, increased capillary density, P = 0.05) and altered protein abundance of factors that regulate aSAT remodelling (i.e. reduced matrix metallopeptidase 9; P = 0.02; increased angiopoietin-2; P < 0.01). Exercise training also increased protein abundance of factors that regulate lipid metabolism (e.g. hormone sensitive lipase and fatty acid translocase; P ≤ 0.03) and key proteins involved in the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway when measured the day after the last exercise session. However, most of these exercise-mediated changes were no longer significant 4 days after exercise. Importantly, MICT and HIIT induced remarkably similar adaptations in aSAT. Collectively, even in the absence of weight loss, 12 weeks of exercise training induced changes in aSAT structure, as well as factors that regulate metabolism and the inflammatory signal pathway in adults with obesity. KEY POINTS: Exercise training is well-known to improve metabolic health in obesity, although how exercise modifies the structure and metabolic function of adipose tissue, in the absence of weight loss, remains unclear. We report that both 12 weeks of moderate-intensity continuous training (MICT) and 12 weeks of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) induced modifications in adipose tissue structure and factors that regulate adipose tissue remodelling, metabolism and the inflammatory signal pathway in adults with obesity, even without weight loss (with no meaningful differences between MICT and HIIT). The modest modifications in adipose tissue structure in response to 12 weeks of MICT or HIIT did not lead to changes in the rate of fatty acid release from adipose tissue. These results expand our understanding about the effects of two commonly used exercise training prescriptions (MICT and HIIT) on adipose tissue remodelling that may lead to advanced strategies for improving metabolic health outcomes in adults with obesity.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- weight loss
- high intensity
- insulin resistance
- heart rate
- bariatric surgery
- resistance training
- skeletal muscle
- high fat diet
- roux en y gastric bypass
- weight gain
- high fat diet induced
- gastric bypass
- fatty acid
- body mass index
- metabolic syndrome
- healthcare
- heart rate variability
- type diabetes
- blood pressure
- physical activity
- mental health
- oxidative stress
- public health
- body composition
- body weight
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stem cells
- health information
- cell therapy
- microbial community
- endothelial cells
- climate change
- ultrasound guided
- study protocol
- preterm birth
- stress induced
- protein kinase
- antibiotic resistance genes