Abstract
The effects of an acute bout of prolonged exercise on muscle include increases in oxidative metabolism and altered cellular redox environment. Histamine mediates many acute exercise responses, including sustained vasodilation and associated delivery of substrates to muscle. Previously, we demonstrated that H1 and H2 histamine receptor blockade with oral antihistamines resulted in a diminished capacity for mitochondrial H2O2 emission in skeletal muscle following an acute bout of prolonged exercise. Here, we tested the hypothesis that along with diminishing mitochondrial H2O2 emission, H1 and H2 histamine receptor blockade would attenuate exercise‐induced changes in skeletal muscle glutathione redox status. Adult male Wistar rats (83 ± 5.5 days old; 440.04 ± 40.70 g) were assigned to one of four groups (n = 12/group): exercise, in the form of one hour of continuous treadmill running at 20 cm/sec (Group 1); mass‐specific oral gavage with H1 antagonist fexofenadine (7.11 mg/kg) and H2 antagonist ranitidine (3.95 mg/kg) one hour prior to the same exercise protocol (Group 2); a group receiving oral H1 and H2 antagonists, but not exercised (Group 3); and a control group, which received neither antihistamines nor exercise (Group 4). An hour post‐exercise, total, reduced (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) were assessed in red gastrocnemius (mixed fiber types) and soleus (oxidative) skeletal muscles. Redox status was expressed as GSH/GSSG. While no changes were observed in total glutathione for any treatment in either muscle, in soleus, antihistamine treatment, but not exercise decreased GSH/GSSG (main effect; p < 0.05). In red gastrocnemius, exercise, but not antihistamine treatment decreased GSH/GSSH (main effect; p < 0.05). These observations trend with those of a blunted capacity for mitochondrial H2O2 emission in skeletal muscle with antihistamine treatment and suggest an altered redox response to exercise following H1/H2 histamine receptor blockade in soleus. Given the widespread and routine use of antihistamines, further research into the effects of these antagonists on redox status in muscle is warranted.Support or Funding InformationNatural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation, Canada Foundation for Innovation.This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.
Published Version
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