Abstract

Obesity is associated with increased risk of several chronic diseases and the loss of disease-free years, which has increased the focus of much research for the discovery of therapy to combat it. Under healthy conditions, women tend to store more fat in subcutaneous deposits. However, this sexual dimorphism tends to be lost in the presence of comorbidities, such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Aerobic physical exercise (APE) has been applied in the management of obesity, however, is still necessary to better understand the effects of APE in obese female. Thus, we investigated the effect of APE on body weight, adiposity, exercise tolerance and glucose metabolism in female ob/ob mice. Eight-weeks-old female wild-type C57BL/6J and leptin-deficient ob/ob mice (Lepob) were distributed into three groups: wild-type sedentary group (Wt; n = 6), leptin-deficient sedentary group (LepobS; n = 5) and leptin-deficient trained group (LepobT; n = 8). The LepobT mice were subjected to 8 weeks of aerobic physical exercise (APE) at 60% of the maximum velocity achieved in the running capacity test. The APE had no effect in attenuating body weight gain, and did not reduce subcutaneous and retroperitoneal white adipose tissue (SC-WAT and RP-WAT, respectively) and interscapular brown adipose tissue (iBAT) weights. The APE neither improved glucose intolerance nor insulin resistance in the LepobT group. Also, the APE did not reduce the diameter or the area of RP-WAT adipocytes, but the APE reduced the diameter and the area of SC-WAT adipocytes, which was associated with lower fasting glycemia and islet/pancreas area ratio in the LepobT group. In addition, the APE increased exercise tolerance and this response was also associated with lower fasting glycemia in the LepobT group. In conclusion, starting APE at a later age with a more severe degree of obesity did not attenuate the excessive body weight gain, however the APE promoted benefits that can improve the female health, and for this reason it should be recommended as a non-pharmacological therapy for obesity.

Highlights

  • Obesity is characterized by an exaggerated accumulation of body fat in white adipose tissue (WAT) accompanied by a different distribution in its body deposits, implying the increase in the visceral WAT/subcutaneous WAT ratio

  • Considering aerobic physical exercise (APE) benefits to the characteristics of the female organism, the purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of APE on body weight, adiposity, exercise tolerance and glucose metabolism in female ob/ob mice, a rodent lineage lacking in leptin secretion that presents a phenotype of obesity at birth

  • Despite that our group previously reported a reduction in body weight gain in male ob/ob mice with the same age and exercise protocol as applied here [28, 29], we revealed that APE did not avoid the excessive body weight gain in female ob/ob mice

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Obesity is characterized by an exaggerated accumulation of body fat in white adipose tissue (WAT) accompanied by a different distribution in its body deposits, implying the increase in the visceral WAT/subcutaneous WAT ratio. The percentage of visceral WAT in obese subjects has a strong correlation with insulin resistance and deficient control of glucose metabolism, which in turn increases the risk of cardiovascular disease [4,5,6]. The mechanism involved in increasing cardiovascular risk are the same in both sexes, it has been demonstrated that women showed a risk of death from cardiovascular disease 1.5 times higher than men. When diagnosed with obesity and T2DM, the risk of myocardial infarction followed by death was 3 to 6 times higher [8]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call