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Molecular profiling of high-level athlete skeletal muscle after acute endurance or resistance exercise: A systems biology approach
Dpt. Physiology & Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, Solnavagen 9, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden, Solnavägen 9; Dpt. Women's and Children's Health, Karolinska Institutet, Solnavagen 9, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
Dpt. Physiology & Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, Solnavagen 9, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
KTH, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology and Health (CBH), Protein Science, Systems Biology. KTH, Centres, Science for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLab.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-2261-0881
Center for Integrative Medical Sciences, RIKEN Yokohama, 1 Chome-7-22 Suehirocho, Tsurumi Ward, Yokohama, Kanagawa 230-0045, Japan.
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2024 (English)In: Molecular Metabolism, ISSN 2212-8778, Vol. 79, article id 101857Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Objective: Long-term high-level exercise training leads to improvements in physical performance and multi-tissue adaptation following changes in molecular pathways. While skeletal muscle baseline differences between exercise-trained and untrained individuals have been previously investigated, it remains unclear how training history influences human multi-omics responses to acute exercise. Methods: We recruited and extensively characterized 24 individuals categorized as endurance athletes with >15 years of training history, strength athletes or control subjects. Timeseries skeletal muscle biopsies were taken from M. vastus lateralis at three time-points after endurance or resistance exercise was performed and multi-omics molecular analysis performed. Results: Our analyses revealed distinct activation differences of molecular processes such as fatty- and amino acid metabolism and transcription factors such as HIF1A and the MYF-family. We show that endurance athletes have an increased abundance of carnitine-derivates while strength athletes increase specific phospholipid metabolites compared to control subjects. Additionally, for the first time, we show the metabolite sorbitol to be substantially increased with acute exercise. On transcriptional level, we show that acute resistance exercise stimulates more gene expression than acute endurance exercise. This follows a specific pattern, with endurance athletes uniquely down-regulating pathways related to mitochondria, translation and ribosomes. Finally, both forms of exercise training specialize in diverging transcriptional directions, differentiating themselves from the transcriptome of the untrained control group. Conclusions: We identify a “transcriptional specialization effect” by transcriptional narrowing and intensification, and molecular specialization effects on metabolomic level Additionally, we performed multi-omics network and cluster analysis, providing a novel resource of skeletal muscle transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling in highly trained and untrained individuals.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier GmbH , 2024. Vol. 79, article id 101857
Keywords [en]
Athletes, Human, Metabolomics, Molecular exercise effects, Multi-omics, Systems biology
National Category
Sport and Fitness Sciences Physiotherapy
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-342392DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2023.101857ISI: 001155045200001PubMedID: 38141850Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85181577427OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kth-342392DiVA, id: diva2:1828904
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QC 20240118

Available from: 2024-01-17 Created: 2024-01-17 Last updated: 2025-02-11Bibliographically approved

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Arif, MuhammadMardinoglu, Adil

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