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Difference between revisions of "Pileggi 2022 EBioMedicine"

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Exercise preferentially enhances skeletal muscle metabolism and improves body composition in women with a history of minimal diet-induced weight loss. These clinical and metabolic mechanism insights move the field towards better personalised approaches for the treatment of distinct obesity phenotypes.
Exercise preferentially enhances skeletal muscle metabolism and improves body composition in women with a history of minimal diet-induced weight loss. These clinical and metabolic mechanism insights move the field towards better personalised approaches for the treatment of distinct obesity phenotypes.
|keywords=Exercise, Metabolomics, Mitochondria, Mitochondrial supercomplexes, Muscle physiology, Obesity, Serine, Sphingolipids, Uncoupling, Weight loss
|editor=[[Plangger M]]
|editor=[[Plangger M]]
}}
}}
{{Labeling
{{Labeling
|area=Exercise physiology;nutrition;life style
|area=Respiration, Exercise physiology;nutrition;life style
|diseases=Obesity
|diseases=Obesity
|tissues=Skeletal muscle
|preparations=Permeabilized tissue
|instruments=Oxygraph-2k
|additional=2022-08
|additional=2022-08
}}
}}

Revision as of 09:50, 16 August 2022

Publications in the MiPMap
Pileggi CA, Blondin DP, Hooks BG, Parmar G, Alecu I, Patten DA, Cuillerier A, O'Dwyer C, Thrush AB, Fullerton MD, Bennett SA, Doucet Γ‰, Haman F, Cuperlovic-Culf M, McPherson R, Dent RRM, Harper ME (2022) Exercise training enhances muscle mitochondrial metabolism in diet-resistant obesity. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.104192

Β» EBioMedicine [Epub ahead of print]. PMID: 35965199 Open Access

Pileggi CA, Blondin DP, Hooks BG, Parmar G, Alecu I, Patten DA, Cuillerier A, O'Dwyer C, Thrush AB, Fullerton MD, Bennett SA, Doucet Γ‰, Haman F, Cuperlovic-Culf M, McPherson R, Dent RRM, Harper ME (2022) EBioMedicine

Abstract: Current paradigms for predicting weight loss in response to energy restriction have general validity but a subset of individuals fail to respond adequately despite documented diet adherence. Patients in the bottom 20% for rate of weight loss following a hypocaloric diet (diet-resistant) have been found to have less type I muscle fibres and lower skeletal muscle mitochondrial function, leading to the hypothesis that physical exercise may be an effective treatment when diet alone is inadequate. In this study, we aimed to assess the efficacy of exercise training on mitochondrial function in women with obesity with a documented history of minimal diet-induced weight loss.

From over 5000 patient records, 228 files were reviewed to identify baseline characteristics of weight loss response from women with obesity who were previously classified in the top or bottom 20% quintiles based on rate of weight loss in the first 6 weeks during which a 900 kcal/day meal replacement was consumed. A subset of 20 women with obesity were identified based on diet-resistance (n=10) and diet sensitivity (n=10) to undergo a 6-week supervised, progressive, combined aerobic and resistance exercise intervention.

Diet-sensitive women had lower baseline adiposity, higher fasting insulin and triglycerides, and a greater number of ATP-III criteria for metabolic syndrome. Conversely in diet-resistant women, the exercise intervention improved body composition, skeletal muscle mitochondrial content and metabolism, with minimal effects in diet-sensitive women. In-depth analyses of muscle metabolomes revealed distinct group- and intervention- differences, including lower serine-associated sphingolipid synthesis in diet-resistant women following exercise training.

Exercise preferentially enhances skeletal muscle metabolism and improves body composition in women with a history of minimal diet-induced weight loss. These clinical and metabolic mechanism insights move the field towards better personalised approaches for the treatment of distinct obesity phenotypes. β€’ Keywords: Exercise, Metabolomics, Mitochondria, Mitochondrial supercomplexes, Muscle physiology, Obesity, Serine, Sphingolipids, Uncoupling, Weight loss β€’ Bioblast editor: Plangger M


Labels: MiParea: Respiration, Exercise physiology;nutrition;life style  Pathology: Obesity 


Tissue;cell: Skeletal muscle  Preparation: Permeabilized tissue 



HRR: Oxygraph-2k 

2022-08