Abstract

Exercise increases the 70-kDa heat shock protein (Hsp70) in the myocardium, and this exercise-induced increase is associated with significantly improved cardiac recovery following insult. However, while heat shock has been shown to elevate Hsp70 primarily in the cardiac vasculature of the myocardium, the localization following exercise is unknown. Male Sprague-Dawley rats performed continuous treadmill running at 30 m/min for 60 min (2% incline) on either 1 or 5 consecutive days. At 30 min and 24 h following exercise, hearts were extirpated, and the left ventricle was isolated, OCT-cork mounted, and sectioned for immunofluorescent analysis. Whereas immunofluorescent analysis revealed little to no Hsp70 in control hearts and 30 min postexercise, the accumulation of Hsp70 24 h after a single exercise bout or 5 days of training was predominantly located in large blood vessels and, in particular, colocalized with a marker of smooth muscle. Furthermore, higher core temperatures attained during exercise led to more abundant accumulation in smaller vessels and the endothelium. It is concluded that the accumulation of myocardial Hsp70 following acute exercise predominantly occurs in a cell type-specific manner, such that changes in the cardiac vasculature account for much of the increase. This accumulation appears first in the smooth muscle of larger vessels and then increases in smaller vessels and the endothelium, as core temperature attained during exercise increases. This finding supports the observations after heat shock and further suggests that the vasculature is a primary target in exercise-induced cardioprotection.

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