Research article - (2019)18, 669 - 673 |
Do Acute Exercise-Induced Activations of the Kynurenine Pathway Induce Regulatory T-Cells on the Long-Term? – A Theoretical Frame Work Supported by Pilot Data |
Christina Koliamitra1, Florian Javelle1, Niklas Joisten1, Alexander Shimabukuro-Vornhagen2,3,4,5, Wilhelm Bloch1,6, Alexander Schenk1, Philipp Zimmer1,7, |
Key words: Acute exercise, kynurenine pathway, immune cells, regulatory T-cells, tryptophan |
Key Points |
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This study was performed in accordance with the declaration of Helsinki, under consideration of the standards for ethics in sport and exercise research and approved by the ethics committee of the University Hospital of Cologne. |
Inclusion criteria |
The following in- and exclusion criteria were defined: healthy female subjects in a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being as defined from World Health Organization (WHO), age above 50 years, no chronic medication intake, no chronic internal disease, no orthopaedic problems, no physical impairments and any other concomitant malignant diseases that would rule out participation in the cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET). |
Experimental design |
Subjects were recruited by announcement in the German Sport University of Cologne website. All participants provided written consent to participate before the beginning of the experiment. To determine acute effects of endurance exercise on the KYN pathway, venous blood samples were collected before (T0) and one minute after (T1) a CPET (described below) by a venipuncture. |
Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) |
The CPET was performed on a bicycle ergometer (ergoline GmbH, Bitz, Germany). The measurement protocol (Cortex Biophysik GmbH, Leipzig, Germany) started with an one minute rest measurement, followed by a three minute warm-up phase at 50 watts of power output and an increase of 25 watts every two minutes until exhaustion of the subject (respiratory exchange ratio>1). In parallel, heart rate recordings were performed through an electrocardiogram (Promedia Medizintechnik, Siegen, Germany) during the whole testing. |
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells isolation (PBMCs) |
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were separated by density gradient centrifugation with lymphocyte separation medium (Promo Cell, Heidelberg, Germany) for 30 minutes at 800g. Subsequently, PBMCs were washed with PBS and resuspended in freezing medium (Thermo Fischer, Waltham, USA) for storage at -150°C until measurement. |
Flow cytometry (FACS) |
After thawing, isolated PBMCs were stained with antibodies for CD3, CD4, CD8, CD25 and CD127. (BD Bioscience, Heidelberg, Germany). T-cells were gated as CD3+ lymphocytes and further divided into T-helper cells (Thelper) (CD4+) and Tcytotox (CD8+). Proportions of Treg were gated as CD25+ CD127dim cells of the Thelper population. Flow cytometry was conducted on a BD FACS Array (BD Bioscience, Heidelberg, Germany). |
Enzyme linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) |
Plasma total TRP, KYN and SER levels were analyzed for both time points by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions (IDK® Tryptophan, IDK® Kynurenine and IDK® Serotonin, Immundiagnostik GmbH, Bensheim, Germany). KYN/TRP ratio was calculated to indirectly assess TRP breakdown within the KYN pathway. |
Statistical analysis |
All statistical analyses were conducted using SPSS software, version 24.0 (IBM, Armonk, New York). Data are presented with means and standard deviation. Normal distribution of all variables was first assessed by Kolmogorov-Smirnow-Test. Not normally distributed variables were logarithmically corrected (KYN, TRP, SER, KYN/SER, TRP/SER), and re-tested for normality. All variables met the normal distribution after correction. Multiple t-tests were used to compare the blood markers levels pre and post exercise. Cohen’s d effect sizes were reported. Pearson correlations were then used to evaluate the association between markers. Level of significance for all statistical analyses was set at alpha = 5%. |
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The 19 recruited healthy women had a mean age of 55 years (SD: ± 5.6), a mean BMI of 22.3 kg·m-2 (SD: ± 2.6) and a mean VO2max of 33.3 ml·min-1·kg-1 (SD: 6.2), mean power output 181.6 W (SD: ± 26.1), mean duration 15.8 minutes (SD: 1.9), mean respiratory quotient 1.22 (SD: 0.11), mean maximum heart rate 171 bpm (SD: 12). Mean values and SDs of all outcome measures are shown in Correlational analyses are presented in |
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To our knowledge, it is reported for the first time that acute exhaustive endurance exercise significantly activates the kynurenine pathway in older healthy female subjects. Moreover, it was shown that endurance capacity, as an indirect marker of training status, is positively associated with Treg levels in this population. Previous studies have shown that a single bout of exhaustive endurance exercise is able to activate the kynurenine pathway (Metcalfe et al., In contrast to the increased KYN/TRP ratio, results of this study show no changes on the TRP/SER ratio. This finding emphasizes that acute exercise predominately activates the kynurenine pathway, without impairing peripheral serotonin metabolism. We have previously revealed that enhanced endurance capacity is associated with higher Treg numbers and proportions in athletes (Weinhold et al., The results of the present investigation should be read within the context of its strengths and limitations. Limitations include a relatively small sample size, lack of control group, lack of subjects’ physical activity/ training behavior documentationlack of follow up measurements,and lack of gene expression or protein level analyses. Further research may include different clinical populations, a wider range of markers such as kynurenic acid and quinolinic acid to cover the neuroregulatory bench of the KYN pathway. Additionally, potential mediators, which are known to be involved in KYN pathway regulation, such as cortisol and inflammatory factors (e. g. Interleukin-6) should be investigated. Strengths of this study include the involvement of a homogenous population at risk for diseases as well as an approach combining the effect of exercise on the KYN pathway and its relation to immune system markers. |
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In conclusion, older women indicated an activation of the kynurenine pathway in response to a single bout of exhaustive endurance exercise. More research is warranted to clarify whether this activation is rather driven by altering IDO1 or TDO induction and activity. Additionally, previously described associations between fitness and Treg proportions (as a marker of anti-inflammatory potential) in athletes was approved for older women. Further investigations will be necessary to improve our hypothesis that an increase in Treg is induced by repetitive exercise induced increases in kynurenine levels. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We would like to thank Dr. Karl-Heinz Kellner for his intellectual input.Dr. Karl-Heinz Kellner (Immundiagnostik AG, Bensheim, Germany) supported this study by providing ELISA Kits.The experiments comply with the current laws of the country in which they were performed. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. |
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