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Background: Healthy individuals on the lower end of the insulin sensitivity spectrum also have a reduced gene expression response to exercise for specific genes. The goal of this study was to determine the relationship between insulin sensitivity and exercise-induced gene expression in an unbiased, global manner.
Methods and Findings: Euglycemic clamps were used to measure insulin sensitivity and muscle biopsies were done at rest and 30 minutes after a single acute exercise bout in 14 healthy participants. Changes in mRNA expression were assessed using microarrays, and miRNA analysis was performed in a subset of 6 of the participants using sequencing techniques. Following exercise, 215 mRNAs were changed at the probe level (Bonferroni-corrected P<0.00000115). Pathway and Gene Ontology analysis showed enrichment in MAP kinase signaling, transcriptional regulation and DNA binding. Changes in several transcription factor mRNAs were correlated with insulin sensitivity, including MYC, r=0.71; SNF1LK, r=0.69; and ATF3, r= 0.61 (5 corrected for false discovery rate). Enrichment in the 5’-UTRs of exercise-responsive genes suggested regulation by common transcription factors, especially EGR1. miRNA species of interest that changed after exercise included miR-378, which is located in an intron of the PPARGC1B gene.
Conclusions: These results indicate that transcription factor gene expression responses to exercise depend highly on insulin sensitivity in healthy people. The overall pattern suggests a coordinated cycle by which exercise and insulin sensitivity regulate gene expression in muscle.
- McLean, Carrie (Author)
- Mielke, Clinton (Author)
- Cordova, Jeanine (Author)
- Langlais, Paul R. (Author)
- Bowen, Benjamin (Author)
- Miranda, Danielle (Author)
- Coletta, Dawn (Author)
- Mandarino, Lawrence (Author)
- College of Health Solutions (Contributor)
Mclean, C. S., Mielke, C., Cordova, J. M., Langlais, P. R., Bowen, B., Miranda, D., . . . Mandarino, L. J. (2015). Gene and MicroRNA Expression Responses to Exercise; Relationship with Insulin Sensitivity. Plos One, 10(5). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0127089
- 2017-04-10 04:29:35
- 2021-11-03 12:09:41
- 3 years ago