Louzada Ruy A, Bouviere Jessica, Matta Leonardo P, Werneck-de-Castro Joao Pedro, Dupuy Corinne, Carvalho Denise P, Fortunato Rodrigo S
Institut of Biophysics Carlos Chagas Filho, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, UMR 8200 CNRS and Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.
Antioxid Redox Signal. 2020 Apr 23. doi: 10.1089/ars.2019.7949.
Exercise-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production activates multiple intracellular signaling pathways through genomic and nongenomic mechanisms that are responsible for the beneficial effects of exercise in muscle. Beyond the positive effect of exercise on skeletal muscle cells, other tissues such as white and brown adipose, liver, central nervous system, endothelial, heart, and endocrine organ tissues are also responsive to exercise. Crosstalk between different cells is essential to achieve homeostasis and to promote the benefits of exercise through paracrine or endocrine signaling. This crosstalk can be mediated by different effectors that include the secretion of metabolites of muscle contraction, myokines, and exosomes. During the past 20 years, it has been demonstrated that contracting muscle cells produce and secrete different classes of myokines, which functionally link muscle with nearly all other cell types. The redox signaling behind this exercise-induced crosstalk is now being decoded. Many of these widespread beneficial effects of exercise require not only a complex ROS-dependent intramuscular signaling cascade but simultaneously, an integrated network with many remote tissues. Strong evidence suggests that the powerful beneficial effect of regular physical activity for preventing (or treating) a large range of disorders might also rely on ROS-mediated signaling. Within a contracting muscle, ROS signaling may control exosomes and myokines secretion. In remote tissues, exercise generates regular and synchronized ROS waves, creating a transient pro-oxidative environment in many cells. These new concepts integrate exercise, ROS-mediated signaling, and the widespread health benefits of exercise.
运动诱导的活性氧(ROS)生成通过基因组和非基因组机制激活多种细胞内信号通路,这些机制负责运动对肌肉的有益作用。除了运动对骨骼肌细胞的积极影响外,白色和棕色脂肪、肝脏、中枢神经系统、内皮、心脏和内分泌器官组织等其他组织也对运动有反应。不同细胞之间的相互作用对于实现体内平衡以及通过旁分泌或内分泌信号传导促进运动的益处至关重要。这种相互作用可以由不同的效应器介导,包括肌肉收缩代谢产物、肌动蛋白和外泌体的分泌。在过去20年中,已经证明收缩的肌肉细胞会产生并分泌不同类型的肌动蛋白,它们在功能上将肌肉与几乎所有其他细胞类型联系起来。现在正在解读这种运动诱导的相互作用背后的氧化还原信号。运动的许多这些广泛的有益作用不仅需要复杂的依赖ROS的肌肉内信号级联,同时还需要一个与许多远端组织相连的整合网络。有力的证据表明,定期体育活动对预防(或治疗)多种疾病的强大有益作用也可能依赖于ROS介导的信号传导。在收缩的肌肉内,ROS信号可能控制外泌体和肌动蛋白的分泌。在远端组织中,运动产生规律且同步的ROS波,在许多细胞中创造一个短暂的促氧化环境。这些新概念整合了运动、ROS介导的信号传导以及运动对健康的广泛益处。