Intrinsic and Extrinsic Contributors to the Cardiac Benefits of Exercise

IF 8.4 1区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Margaret H. Hastings PhD , Claire Castro PhD , Rebecca Freeman BA , Azrul Abdul Kadir PhD , Carolin Lerchenmüller MD , Haobo Li PhD , James Rhee MD, PhD , Jason D. Roh MD, MHS , Kangsan Roh PhD , Anand P. Singh PhD , Chao Wu MD, PhD , Peng Xia PhD , Qiulian Zhou PhD , Junjie Xiao MD, PhD , Anthony Rosenzweig MD
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Abstract

Among its many cardiovascular benefits, exercise training improves heart function and protects the heart against age-related decline, pathological stress, and injury. Here, we focus on cardiac benefits with an emphasis on more recent updates to our understanding. While the cardiomyocyte continues to play a central role as both a target and effector of exercise’s benefits, there is a growing recognition of the important roles of other, noncardiomyocyte lineages and pathways, including some that lie outside the heart itself. We review what is known about mediators of exercise’s benefits—both those intrinsic to the heart (at the level of cardiomyocytes, fibroblasts, or vascular cells) and those that are systemic (including metabolism, inflammation, the microbiome, and aging)—highlighting what is known about the molecular mechanisms responsible.

Abstract Image

运动对心脏有益的内在和外在因素
运动训练对心血管有诸多益处,其中包括改善心脏功能,保护心脏免受衰老、病理压力和损伤的影响。在此,我们将重点讨论对心脏的益处,并着重介绍我们最近的最新认识。虽然心肌细胞作为运动益处的目标和效应器继续发挥着核心作用,但人们越来越认识到其他非心肌细胞系和通路的重要作用,包括一些位于心脏本身之外的细胞系和通路。我们回顾了目前已知的运动益处介导因素--包括心脏固有介导因素(心肌细胞、成纤维细胞或血管细胞水平)和系统介导因素(包括新陈代谢、炎症、微生物组和衰老)--重点介绍了目前已知的分子机制。
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来源期刊
JACC: Basic to Translational Science
JACC: Basic to Translational Science CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS-
CiteScore
14.20
自引率
1.00%
发文量
161
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: JACC: Basic to Translational Science is an open access journal that is part of the renowned Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC). It focuses on advancing the field of Translational Cardiovascular Medicine and aims to accelerate the translation of new scientific discoveries into therapies that improve outcomes for patients with or at risk for Cardiovascular Disease. The journal covers thematic areas such as pre-clinical research, clinical trials, personalized medicine, novel drugs, devices, and biologics, proteomics, genomics, and metabolomics, as well as early phase clinical trial methodology.
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