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Aerobic capacity and exercise mediate protection against hepatic steatosis via enhanced bile acid metabolism. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aerobic fitness and exercise positively influence bile acid (BA) metabolism and help manage diet-induced fatty liver disease (hepatic steatosis).
  • Research showed that rats with high aerobic capacity produced more cholesterol and specific BAs when on a high-fat diet compared to those with low capacity.
  • In mice with a gene deletion affecting BA synthesis, exercise did not reduce liver fat, indicating that increased BA metabolism from exercise is crucial for combating fatty liver conditions.

Article Abstract

High cardiorespiratory fitness and exercise show evidence of altering bile acid (BA) metabolism and are known to protect or treat diet-induced hepatic steatosis, respectively. Here, we tested the hypothesis that high intrinsic aerobic capacity and exercise both increase hepatic BA synthesis measured by the incorporation of HO. We also leveraged mice with inducible liver-specific deletion of (LCyp7a1KO), which encodes the rate-limiting enzyme for BA synthesis, to test if exercise-induced BA synthesis is critical for exercise to reduce hepatic steatosis. The synthesis of hepatic BA, cholesterol, and lipogenesis was measured in rats bred for either high (HCR) vs. low (LCR) aerobic capacity consuming acute and chronic high-fat diets. HCR rats had increased synthesis of cholesterol and certain BA species in the liver compared to LCR rats. We also found that chronic exercise with voluntary wheel running (VWR) (4 weeks) increased newly synthesized BAs of specific species in male C57BL/6J mice compared to sedentary mice. Loss of resulted in fewer new BAs and increased liver triglycerides compared to controls after a 10-week high-fat diet. Additionally, exercise via VWR for 4 weeks effectively reduced hepatic triglycerides in the high-fat diet-fed control male and female mice as expected; however, exercise in LCyp7a1KO mice did not lower liver triglycerides in either sex. These results show that aerobic capacity and exercise increase hepatic BA metabolism, which may be critical for combatting hepatic steatosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11526936PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.10.21.619494DOI Listing

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