The high-intensity interval training mitigates the cardiac remodeling in spontaneously hypertensive rats

Life Sci. 2022 Nov 1:308:120959. doi: 10.1016/j.lfs.2022.120959. Epub 2022 Sep 13.

Abstract

Aim: To evaluate the influence of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on cardiac structural and functional characteristics and myocardial mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling in hypertensive rats.

Methods: Male rats (12 months old) were divided into three groups: Wistar Kyoto rats (WKY, n = 8); sedentary spontaneously hypertensive rats (SED-SHR, n = 10), and trained spontaneously hypertensive rats (HIIT-SHR, n = 10). Systolic blood pressure (SBP), functional capacity, echocardiography, isolated papillary muscle, and gene expression of MAPK gene-encoding proteins associated with Elk1, cJun, ATF2, MEF2 were analyzed.

Key findings: HIIT decreased SBP and increased functional capacity, left ventricular diastolic diameter, posterior wall thickness-left ventricle, relative wall thickness-left ventricle, and resting tension of the papillary muscle. In hypertensive rats, we observed a decrease in the gene-encoding ATF2 protein; this decrease was reversed by HIIT.

Significance: The influence of HIIT in the SHR model in the compensated hypertension phase generated an increase in cardiac hypertrophy, attenuated myocardial diastolic dysfunction, lowered blood pressure, improved functional capacity, and reversed the alteration in gene-encoding ATF2 protein.

Keywords: Hypertension; MAP kinase signaling system; Papillary muscles; Physical exercise.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Blood Pressure / physiology
  • High-Intensity Interval Training*
  • Hypertension* / metabolism
  • Male
  • Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases / metabolism
  • Myocardium / metabolism
  • Rats
  • Rats, Inbred SHR
  • Rats, Inbred WKY
  • Ventricular Remodeling / physiology

Substances

  • Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases