Vol. 284, Issue 5, H1668-H1678, May 2003
Angiogenic growth factor expression in rat skeletal muscle in
response to exercise training
Pamela G.
Lloyd1,
Barry M.
Prior1,
Hsiao T.
Yang1, and
Ronald L.
Terjung1,2,3
1 Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of
Veterinary Medicine, 2 Department of Physiology, College
of Medicine, and 3 Dalton Cardiovascular Research
Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211
Angiogenesis occurs in skeletal muscle in
response to exercise training. To gain insight into the regulation of
this process, we evaluated the mRNA expression of factors implicated in
angiogenesis over the course of a training program. We studied
sedentary control (n = 17) rats and both sedentary
(n = 18) and exercise-trained (n = 48)
rats with bilateral femoral artery ligation. Training consisted of
treadmill exercise (4 times/day, 1-24 days). Basal mRNA expression
in sedentary control muscle was inversely related to muscle
vascularity. Angiogenesis was histologically evident in trained white
gastrocnemius muscle by day 12. Training produced initial
three- to sixfold increases in VEGF, VEGF receptors (KDR and Flt), the
angiopoietin receptor (Tie-2), and endothelial nitric oxide synthase
mRNA, which dissipated before the increase in capillarity, and a
substantial (30- to 50-fold) but transient upregulation of monocyte
chemoattractant protein 1 mRNA. These results emphasize the importance
of early events in regulating angiogenesis. However, we observed a
sustained elevation of the angiopoietin 2-to-angiopoietin 1 ratio,
suggesting continued vascular destabilization. The response to exercise
was (in general) tempered in high-oxidative muscles. These findings
place importance on cellular events coupled to the onset of angiogenesis.
capillaries; peripheral vascular disease; endothelium; cytokines; chemokines