Done Aaron J, Traustadóttir Tinna
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, PO Box 5640, Flagstaff, AZ, 86011-5640, USA.
Age (Dordr). 2016 Dec;38(5-6):505-512. doi: 10.1007/s11357-016-9942-x. Epub 2016 Aug 25.
Older individuals who exercise regularly exhibit greater resistance to oxidative stress than their sedentary peers, suggesting that exercise can modify age-associated loss of resistance to oxidative stress. However, we recently demonstrated that a single bout of exercise confers protection against a subsequent oxidative challenge in young, but not older adults. We therefore hypothesized that repeated bouts of exercise would be needed to increase resistance to an oxidative challenge in sedentary older middle-aged adults. Sedentary older middle-aged men and women (50-63 years, n = 11) participated in an 8-week exercise intervention. Maximal oxygen consumption was measured before and after the intervention. The exercise intervention consisted of three sessions per week, for 45 min at an intensity corresponding to 70-85 % maximal heart rate (HR). Resistance to oxidative stress was measured by F-isoprostane response to a forearm ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) trial. Each participant underwent the I/R trial before and after the exercise intervention. The intervention elicited a significant increase in maximal oxygen consumption (VO) (P < 0.0001). Baseline levels of F-isoprostanes pre- and post-intervention did not differ, but the F-isoprostane response to the I/R trial was significantly lower following the exercise intervention (time-by-trial interaction, P = 0.043). Individual improvements in aerobic fitness were associated with greater improvements in the F-isoprostane response (r = -0.761, P = 0.011), further supporting the role of aerobic fitness in resistance to oxidative stress. These data demonstrate that regular exercise with improved fitness leads to increased resistance to oxidative stress in older middle-aged adults and that this measure is modifiable in previously sedentary individuals.
经常锻炼的老年人比久坐不动的同龄人表现出更强的抗氧化应激能力,这表明运动可以改变与年龄相关的抗氧化应激能力丧失。然而,我们最近证明,一次锻炼对年轻人有保护作用,可抵御随后的氧化应激挑战,但对老年人却没有。因此,我们推测,久坐不动的中老年成年人需要反复锻炼才能增强对氧化应激挑战的抵抗力。久坐不动的中老年男性和女性(50 - 63岁,n = 11)参与了一项为期8周的运动干预。在干预前后测量了最大耗氧量。运动干预包括每周三次,每次45分钟,强度相当于最大心率(HR)的70 - 85%。通过对前臂缺血/再灌注(I/R)试验的F - 异前列腺素反应来测量抗氧化应激能力。每位参与者在运动干预前后都进行了I/R试验。干预使最大耗氧量(VO)显著增加(P < 0.0001)。干预前后F - 异前列腺素的基线水平没有差异,但运动干预后对I/R试验的F - 异前列腺素反应显著降低(时间×试验交互作用,P = 0.043)。有氧适能的个体改善与F - 异前列腺素反应的更大改善相关(r = -0.761,P = 0.011),进一步支持了有氧适能在抗氧化应激中的作用。这些数据表明,适度的规律运动可增强中老年成年人对氧化应激的抵抗力,并且这一指标在以前久坐不动的个体中是可以改变的。