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  4. Type 5 adenylyl cyclase disruption leads to enhanced exercise performance
 
research article

Type 5 adenylyl cyclase disruption leads to enhanced exercise performance

Vatner, Dorothy E.
•
Yan, Lin
•
Lai, Lo
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2015
Aging Cell

The most important physiological mechanism mediating enhanced exercise performance is increased sympathetic, beta adrenergic receptor (beta-AR), and adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity. This is the first report of decreased AC activity mediating increased exercise performance. We demonstrated that AC5 disruption, that is, knock out (KO) mice, a longevity model, increases exercise performance. Importantly for its relation to longevity, exercise was also improved in old AC5 KO. The mechanism resided in skeletal muscle rather than in the heart, as confirmed by cardiac and skeletal muscle-specific AC5 KO's, where exercise performance was no longer improved by the cardiac-specific AC5 KO, but was by the skeletal muscle-specific AC5 KO, and there was no difference in cardiac output during exercise in AC5 KO vs. WT. Mitochondrial biogenesis was a major mechanism mediating the enhanced exercise. SIRT1, FoxO3a, MEK, and the anti-oxidant, MnSOD were upregulated in AC5 KO mice. The improved exercise in the AC5 KO was blocked with either a SIRT1 inhibitor, MEK inhibitor, or by mating the AC5 KO with MnSOD hetero KO mice, confirming the role of SIRT1, MEK, and oxidative stress mechanisms. The Caenorhabditis elegans worm AC5 ortholog, acy-3 by RNAi, also improved fitness, mitochondrial function, antioxidant defense, and lifespan, attesting to the evolutionary conservation of this pathway. Thus, decreasing sympathetic signaling through loss of AC5 is not only a mechanism to improve exercise performance, but is also a mechanism to improve healthful aging, as exercise also protects against diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease, which all limit healthful aging.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/acel.12401
Web of Science ID

WOS:000367661200016

Author(s)
Vatner, Dorothy E.
Yan, Lin
Lai, Lo
Yuan, Chujun
Mouchiroud, Laurent  
Pachon, Ronald E.
Zhang, Jie
Dillinger, Jean-Guillaume
Houtkooper, Riekelt H.  
Auwerx, Johan  
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Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
Aging Cell
Volume

14

Issue

6

Start page

1075

End page

1084

Subjects

antioxidant defense

•

exercise

•

mitochondrial

•

biogenesis

•

skeletal muscle

•

type 5 adenylyl cyclase

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
February 16, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/123938
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