The capacity to transport and use O2 (i.e., the oxygen consumption or VO2) during large muscle dynamic exercise is a key parameter that allows the efficiency of transfer of physiological work to mechanical movement and varies according to speed or slope changes (Pivarnik and Sherman, 1990). VO2 data are fundamental for exercise prescription and, in human protocols, the target exercise load is generally expressed as a percentage of the maximal O2 consumption per minute (VO2max) determined during an incremental concentric (CON) exercise test. In physiological studies, rodents are widely used for understanding the mechanisms of muscle response to exercise (Armstrong et al., 1983; Lynn et al., 1998). Treadmill running tests in rats are an invaluable tool for investigating experimentally-induced or pathological impairment of exercise performance and during these tests it is possible to modify the exercise intensity by varying the speed, the slope or both. In CON condition, both the treadmill slope and speed affect physiological demand, which is often evaluated through oxygen consumption (Hoydal et al., 2007; Sonne and Galbo, 1980; Wisloff et al., 2001) , therefore, numerous studies using different treadmill slope and speed have been conducted to assess skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise like mitochondrial biogenesis, fatty acid oxidation and contractile proteins phenotype shift (Egan and Zierath, 2013). However, little is known in rats about the effects of downhill running conditions (i.e. eccentric muscle work, ECC), especially on VO2. To date, only one study deals with VO2 comparisons in downhill and uphill running conditions at different speeds in rats (Armstrong et al., 1983). In this protocol, VO2 were measured using a box mixing chamber and the only slope variation studied did not allow estimating the additional incline required, at a given speed, to obtain similar uphill and downhill (CON versus ECC) VO2 values. However, these metabolic parameters are very useful for understanding the physiological impact of ECC exercise. In humans, it is well known that Uphill VO2/Downhill VO2 ratio is approximately 2 on treadmill (Pivarnik and Sherman, 1990). Similar references would be interesting in animals allowing researchers to quantify more accurately the metabolic load sustained during downhill running protocols. To our knowledge, only one study (Armstrong et al., 1983) showed that VO2 measured using a box mixing chamber is 1.5 higher in uphill than in downhill runners (treadmill running tests at 30 cm/sec). Using this method (box mixing chambers) for VO2 measurements complicates data collection during incremental treadmill exercise testing with variable speeds and slopes. Indeed, collecting VO2 data for different speeds using these devices would imply full replacement of the air contained in the box after each speed stage, causing a substantial cost of time. Furthermore, the investigators would not have any direct access to the animal. Breath-by-breath method for measurement of VO2 appears as a good way to overcome these issues; however, few publications have reported values in this experimental condition in rats (Musch et al., 1988; Russell et al., 1980). The cost of running or walking in uphill and downhill condition in humans is well documented, and nowadays most studies in humans use eccentric and concentric training interventions of comparable mechanical power or with different powers that induce similar percentages of VO2 (Dufour et al., 2004; LaStayo et al., 2000; 2003; Perrey et al., 2001). This work falls within a translational approach of the understanding of the physiological effects of different types of exercises, from the animal model to the humans. In this regard, it is particularly important to compare muscle adaptations in rats following a bout of exercise inducing, just as it is done in humans, either identical mechanical stimulation (same amount of work, speed and slope in both conditions) or equal metabolic stimulation (exercise intensity that induces the same VO2). Based on the recent scientific literature, it is interesting to note that among the stimuli known to mediate cellular adaptations to physical training (Changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, alterations in intracellular pH, changes in metabolite concentrations, increased reactive oxygen species production...), some of them are highly dependent on energetic demand, like for example NAD+/NADH and AMP/ATP ratios (White and Schenk, 2012). These factors have been extensively studied in the past years and they have been proven to be significantly involved in training adaptations via activation of signaling pathways like Sirtuins and AMPK (Jessen et al., 2014; Pucci et al., 2013). Therefore, one can postulate that eccentric exercise would induce similar benefits as concentric training only when performed at the same "metabolic intensity". Nevertheless, ECC exercise also activates some other stimuli like reactive oxygen species production with more potency than concentric exercise (Isner-Horobeti et al., 2014) that could compensate for the lack of activation of metabolic sensors. Taken together, these findings highlight the need of methodological studies assessing the energetic cost of concentric and eccentric training performed on traditionally used ergometers like treadmill (with different slope and speed), in order to enable studies comparing physiological adaptations to both training methods with similar metabolic demand. Therefore, our main objective was to determine which percentage of downhill and uphill slope induces similar VO2 in rats, during a treadmill run. To this purpose, we calculated the relationship between VO2 and speed or slope variations in rats during an incremental treadmill exercise with various slopes (i.e., CON and ECC conditions) by measuring VO2 using for the first time an innovating breath-by-breath measuring device that allows direct access to the treadmill and the animals, leading to a significant saving of time compared to the box mixing chamber method, and allowing the completion of a continuous run with increasing speed stages. Based on previous work (Armstrong et al., 1983; Minetti et al., 1994; 2002) we hypothesized that doubling the eccentric slope (and thus doubling the work load, compared to concentric condition) would induce similar metabolic response (i.e. VO2values). |