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- Title
Moderate-intensity interval exercise exacerbates cardiac lipotoxicity in high-fat, high-calories diet-fed mice.
- Authors
Geng, Jing; Zhang, Xiaoliang; Guo, Yanjie; Wen, He; Guo, Dong; Liang, Qi; Pu, Siying; Wang, Ying; Liu, Mingchuan; Li, Zhelong; Hu, Wei; Yang, Xue; Chang, Pan; Hu, Lang; Li, Yan
- Abstract
Physical exercise is a cornerstone for preventing diet-induced obesity, while it is unclear whether physical exercise could offset high-fat, high-calories diet (HFCD)-induced cardiac dysfunction. Here, mice were fed with HFCD and simultaneously subjected to physical exercise. As expected, physical exercise prevented HFCD-induced whole-body fat deposition. However, physical exercise exacerbated HFCD-induced cardiac damage. Further metabolomic analysis results showed that physical exercise induced circulating lipid redistribution, leading to excessive cardiac lipid uptake and lipotoxicity. Our study provides valuable insights into the cardiac effects of exercise in mice fed with HFCD, suggesting that counteracting the negative effect of HFCD by simultaneous physical exercise might be detrimental. Moreover, inappropriate physical exercise may damage certain organs even though it leads to weight loss and overall metabolic benefits. Of note, the current findings are based on animal experiments, the generalizability of these findings beyond this specific diet and mouse strain remains to be further explored. While the metabolic benefits of physical exercise are well known, it is less clear whether exercise can prevent cardiac damage in diet-induced obesity. Here, the authors show that while exercise prevented weight gain in mice, it surprisingly worsened heart damage due to excessive lipid uptake and lipotoxicity.
- Subjects
EXERCISE physiology; BLOOD lipids; HEART failure; ANIMAL experimentation; WEIGHT gain
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2025, Vol 16, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-55917-8