Binge drinking leads to an oxidative and metabolic imbalance in skeletal muscle during adolescence in rats: endocrine repercussion
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Romero-Herrera, Inés; Nogales, Fátima; Díaz Castro, Javier; Moreno Fernández, Jorge; Gallego‑Lopez, María del Carmen; Ochoa Herrera, Julio José; Carreras, Olimpia; Ojeda, María LuisaEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Binge drinking Adolescence Skeletal muscle
Fecha
2023-09-07Referencia bibliográfica
Romero-Herrera, I., Nogales, F., Diaz-Castro, J. et al. Binge drinking leads to an oxidative and metabolic imbalance in skeletal muscle during adolescence in rats: endocrine repercussion. J Physiol Biochem 79, 799–810 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s13105-023-00983-z]
Patrocinador
Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Sevilla/ CBUA; VII Plan Propio de Investigación y Transferencia of University of Seville 2022; Predoctoral researcher and teaching personnel contract, number USE-22212-V; Andalusian Regional Government which supports the CTS-193 research group (2021/CTS-193; 2019/CTS-193)Resumen
Binge drinking (BD) is an especially pro-oxidant model of alcohol consumption, mainly used by adolescents. It has recently
been related to the hepatic IR-process. Skeletal muscle is known to be involved in insulin action and modulation through
myokine secretion. However, there is no information on muscle metabolism and myokine secretion after BD exposure in
adolescents. Two experimental groups of adolescent rats have been used: control and BD-exposed one. Oxidative balance,
energy status and lipid, and protein metabolism have been analyzed in muscle, together with myokine serum levels (IL-6,
myostatin, LIF, IL-5, fractalkine, FGF21, irisin, BDNF, FSTL1, apelin, FABP3, osteocrin, osteonectin (SPARC), and oncostatin).
In muscle, BD affects the antioxidant enzyme balance leading to lipid and protein oxidation. Besides, it also increases
the activation of AMPK and thus contributes to decrease SREBP1 and pmTOR and to increase FOXO3a expressions, promoting
lipid and protein degradation. These alterations deeply affect the myokine secretion pattern. This is the first study to
examine a general myokine response after exposure to BD. BD not only caused a detrimental imbalance in myokines related
to muscle turnover, decreased those contributing to increase IR-process, decreased FST-1 and apelin and their cardioprotective
function but also reduced the neuroprotective BDNF. Consequently, BD leads to an important metabolic and energetic
disequilibrium in skeletal muscle, which contributes to exacerbate a general IR-process.