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Hypocaloric diet reduces exercise-induced alpha 2-adrenergic antilipolytic effect and alpha 2-adrenergic receptor mRNA levels in adipose tissue of obese women

Publication at Third Faculty of Medicine |
2002

Abstract

Previous investigations have shown that alpha2-adrenoceptor (alpha2-AR) stimulation blunts lipid mobilization during physiological activation of the sympathetic nervous system promoted by exercise in se abdominal adipose tissue (SCAAT) in obese men. To investigate the effect of a low calorie diet (LCD) on the alpha2-adrenergic responsiveness and on the expression of alpha2-AR and beta2-adrenoceptor (beta2-AR) in SCAAT, 11 obese women (weight: 99.1 +/- 4.6 kg; body mass index: 34.3 +/- 1.1 kg/m(2)) received a 12-wk diet providing 500 kcal/d less than their usual diet.

The exercise-induced alpha2-adrenergic antilipolytic effect was investigated in SCAAT before and at the end of LCD. Changes in extracellular glycerol concentration and local blood flow were measured in SCAAT during a 45-min exercise bout (50% of heart rate reserve) using a control microdialysis probe and a probe supplemented with the alpha2-AR antagonist phentolamine.

SCAAT biopsies were performed for determination of mRNA levels using RT-competitive PCR. Plasma catecholamine responses to exercise bout were not different before and at the end of LCD.

Before LCD, the exercise-induced increase in extracellular glycerol concentration was potentiated by phentolamine supplementation, while this potentiating effect of the alpha-antagonist was not observed at the end of LCD. No changes were observed for beta2-AR and hormone-sensitive lipase mRNA levels, while alpha2-AR mRNA level was significantly decreased in adipose tissue during LCD.

These findings show that alpha2-AR-mediated antilipolytic action is reduced by a moderate hypocalorie diet and that down-regulation of alpha2-AR mRNA levels may participate in the decrease of the alpha2-adrenergic effect revealed by microdialysis