Acute and long-term exercise differently modulate plasma levels of oxylipins, endocannabinoids, and their analogues in young sedentary adults: A sub-study and secondary analyses from the ACTIBATE randomized controlled-trial
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/84874Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jurado Fasoli, Lucas; Sanchez‑Delgado, Guillermo; Osuna Prieto, Francisco Javier; Ortiz Álvarez, Lourdes; Aguilera García, Concepción María; Llamas Elvira, José Manuel; Martínez Téllez, Borja ManuelEditorial
Ebiomedicine
Materia
Aerobic Strength Bioactive lipid Concurrent training Inflammation resolution
Fecha
2022-10-27Referencia bibliográfica
Jurado-Fasoli, L., Di, X., Sanchez-Delgado, G., Yang, W., Osuna-Prieto, F. J., Ortiz-Alvarez, L., ... & Martinez-Tellez, B. (2022). Acute and long-term exercise differently modulate plasma levels of oxylipins, endocannabinoids, and their analogues in young sedentary adults: A sub-study and secondary analyses from the ACTIBATE randomized controlled-trial. EBioMedicine, 85.[DOI: Jurado-Fasoli, L., Di, X., Sanchez-Delgado, G., Yang, W., Osuna-Prieto, F. J., Ortiz-Alvarez, L., ... & Martinez-Tellez, B. (2022). Acute and long-term exercise differently modulate plasma levels of oxylipins, endocannabinoids, and their analogues in young sedentary adults: A sub-study and secondary analyses from the ACTIBATE randomized controlled-trial. EBioMedicine, 85.]
Resumen
Background Fatty acid-derived lipid mediators including oxylipins, endocannabinoids (eCBs), and their analogues,
have emerged as key metabolites in the inflammatory and immune response to physiological stressors.
Methods This report was based on a sub-study and secondary analyses the ACTIBATE single-center unblinded
randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT02365129). The study was performed in the Sport and
Health University Research Institute and the Virgen de las Nieves University Hospital of the University of
Granada. Eligible participants were young, sedentary adults with no chronic diseases. Here, we performed both an
acute endurance and resistance exercise sub-studies (n = 14 and 17 respectively), and a 24-week supervised
exercise intervention, combining endurance and resistance exercise training at moderate-intensity (MOD-EX) or
vigorous-intensity (VIG-EX) exercise groups, in young sedentary adults. Randomization was performed by
unrestricted randomization. Plasma levels of oxylipins, eCBs, and their analogues were measured using liquid
chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Findings Both endurance and resistance exercise increased by +50% the plasma levels of dihomo-γ-linolenic acid and
arachidonic acid (AA) omega-6 derived oxylipins, as well as eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid omega-3
derived after 3 and 120 min of the bout of exercise (all η2 ≥ 0.219 and P ≤ 0.039). These exercise modalities also increased the levels of anandamide and eCBs analogues (+25%). 145 young sedentary adults were assigned to a
control (CON, n = 54), a MOD-EX (n = 48) or a VIG-EX (n = 43). 102 participants were included in the final longterm
analyses (CON, n = 36; MOD-EX, n = 33; and VIG-EX, n = 33) of the trial. After 24-week of supervised
exercise, MOD-EX decreased plasma levels of omega-6 oxylipins, concretely linoleic acid (LA) and adrenic acid
derived oxylipins, and the eCBs analogues OEA and LEA in comparison to the CON (all P ≤ 0.021). VIG-EX
decreased LA-derived oxylipins and LEA compared to CON. No relevant adverse events were recorded.
Interpretation Endurance and resistance exercises acutely increased plasma levels of oxylipins, eCBs, and their
analogues, whereas 24 weeks of exercise training decreased fasting plasma levels of omega-6 oxylipins, and eCBs
analogues in young, sedentary adults.