EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

Would Combination Be Better: Swimming Exercise and Intermittent Fasting Improve High-Fat Diet-Induced Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Obese Rats via the miR-122-5p/SREBP-1c/CPT1A Pathway.

Authors

Yang, Kang; Liu, Chengye; Shao, Jun; Guo, Lingxiang; Wang, Qing; Meng, Zhaoxiang; Jin, Xing; Chen, Xianghe

Abstract

Background: Swimming and intermittent fasting can both improve obesity-induced NAFLD, but which of the two is more effective and whether the combination of the two has a superimposed effect is inconclusive. Methods: The model of NAFLD in obese rats was established by a high-fat diet and performed swimming, intermittent fasting, and a combination of both interventions for 8 weeks. Serum lipids and enzyme activity were measured by an automatic biochemical analyzer. Liver morphostructural analysis was observed by transmission electron microscopy, and morphology was observed by HE staining. RT‒PCR was used to detect the mRNA level. Results: Morphology and microstructure of the liver of model rats were impaired, with the upregulation of miR-122-5p, SREBP-1c, FASN and ACC1. Eight weeks of swimming exercise, intermittent fasting and the combination of both attenuate these effects, manifested by the downregulation of miR-122-5p and upregulation of CPT1A mRNA levels. There was no significant stacking effect of the combination of the swimming and intermittent fasting interventions. Conclusion: NAFLD leads to pathology in model rats. Eight weeks of swimming exercise, intermittent fasting and the combination of both can inhibit miR-122-5p and improve hepatic lipid metabolism, while no significant additive effects of combining the interventions were found.

Subjects

INTERMITTENT fasting; NON-alcoholic fatty liver disease; RAT diseases; SWIMMING; HIGH-fat diet; LABORATORY rats; FAT

Publication

Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome & Obesity: Targets & Therapy, 2024, Vol 17, p1675

ISSN

1178-7007

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.2147/DMSO.S448165

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved