0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

Exercise and Vitamins: Now, Wait A Minute. .

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2009-05-15 13:49:24
  • 조회수5480
Derek Lowe, an Arkansan by birth, got his BA from Hendrix College and his PhD in organic chemistry from Duke before spending time in Germany on a Humboldt Fellowship on his post-doc. He's worked for several major pharmaceutical companies since 1989 on drug discovery projects against schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, diabetes, osteoporosis and other diseases. To contact Derek email him directly: derekb.lowe@gmail.com Now, this is an example of an idea being followed through to its logical conclusion. Here’s where we start: the good effects of exercise are well known, and seem to be beyond argument. Among these are marked improvements in insulin resistance (the hallmark of type II diabetes) and glucose uptake. In fact, exercise, combined with losing adipose weight, is absolutely the best therapy for mild cases of adult-onset diabetes, and can truly reverse the condition, an effect no other treatment can match. So, what actually causes these exercise effects? There has to be a signal (or set of signals) down at the molecular level that tells your cells what’s happening, and initiates changes in their metabolism. One good candidate is the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mitochondria. Exercise most certainly increases a person’s use of oxygen, and increases the work load on the mitochondria (since that’s where all the biochemical energy is coming from, anyway). Increased mitochondrial formation of ROS has been well documented, and they have a lot of physiological effects. Of course, ROS are also implicated in many theories of aging and cellular damage, which is why cells have several systems to try to soak these things up. That’s exactly why people take antioxidants, vitamin C and vitamin E especially. So. . .what if you take those while you’re exercising? A new paper in PNAS askes that exact question. About forty healthy young male volunteers took part in the study, which involved four weeks of identical exercise programs. Half of the volunteers were already in athletic training, and half weren’t. Both groups were then split again, and half of each cohort took 1000 mg/day of vitamin C and 400 IU/day vitamin E, while the other half took no antioxidants at all. So, we have the effects of exercise, plus and minus previous training, and plus and minus antioxidants. And as it turns out, antioxidant supplements appear to cancel out many of the beneficial effects of exercise. Soaking up those transient bursts of reactive oxygen species keeps them from signaling. Looked at the other way, oxidative stress could be a key to preventing type II diabetes. Glucose uptake and insulin sensitivity aren't affected by exercise if you're taking supplementary amounts of vitamins C and E, and this effect is seen all the way down to molecular markers such as the PPAR coactivator proteins PGC1 alpha and beta. In fact, this paper seems to constitute strong evidence that ROS are the key mediators for the effects of exercise, and that this process is mediated through PGC1 and PPAR-gamma. (Note that PPAR-gamma is the target of the glitazone class of drugs for type II diabetes, although signaling in this area is notoriously complex). Interestingly, exercise also increases the body's endogenous antioxidant systems - superoxide dismutase and so on. These are some of the gene targets of PPAR-gamma, suggesting that these are downstream effects. Taking antioxidant supplements kept these from going up, too. All these effects were slightly more pronounced in the group that hadn't been exercising before, but were still very strong across the board. This confirms the suspicions raised by a paper from a group in Valencia last year, which showed that vitamin C supplementation seemed to decrease the development of endurance capacity during an exercise program. I think that there's enough evidence to go ahead and say it: exercise and antioxidants work against each other. The whole take-antioxidants-for-better-health idea, which has been taking some hits in recent years, has just taken another big one. http://pipeline.corante.com/archives/2009/05/13/exercise_and_vitamins_now_wait_a_minute_.php
Total406 [ page17/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
166 RNAi: A Powerful Reverse Genetic Tool (1) 2006.06.07 고재홍 2006.06.07 2,124
165 언제까지 공부해야하나? (1)첨부파일 2006.06.04 한진 2006.06.04 1,904
164 Mitochondrial physiology in tumourigenesis 2006.05.31 한진 2006.05.31 2,645
163 mitochondrial respiration 2006.05.31 한진 2006.05.31 7,414
162 커피 하루 1-3잔, 심혈관질환 예방에 도움 (1) 2006.05.27 김태호 2006.05.27 1,859
161 Cell - table of contents 2006.05.20 김형규 2006.05.20 7,165
160 science table of contents 2006.05.20 김형규 2006.05.20 4,983
159 Nature- table of contents 2006.05.20 김형규 2006.05.20 10,569
158 1번 염색체 해독 완료…인간게놈 ‘유전자 지도’ 완성 (2) 2006.05.18 김태호 2006.05.18 2,232
157 Scientists report Parkinson's discovery 첨부파일 2006.05.07 한진 2006.05.07 3,209
156 설창원 (2) 2006.05.04 한진 2006.05.04 1,879
155 Parkin’, ‘PINK1’ 단백질에 대한 논문이 동시에 나왔습니다. 참고바랍니다. (2)첨부파일 2006.05.04 한진 2006.05.04 4,402
154 Science of Sport: If you "feel the burn," you need to bulk up your mitochondria 첨부파일 2006.05.03 한진 2006.05.03 3,563
153 Possible target for future therapies aimed at delaying or stopping Alzheimer's disease 2006.05.02 한진 2006.05.02 1,895
152 Understanding Cell Death May Bring New Life To Kidney Treatment 2006.04.21 한진 2006.04.21 2,192
처음 이전 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 다음 마지막