Publications
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Now showing items 4841-4860 of 5385 records
Dissociation between short-term unloading and resistance training effects on skeletal muscle Na+,K+-ATPase, muscle function, and fatigue in humans
Petersen, AC; Steward, CH; McKenna, MJ; Levinger, I; Wyckelsma, VL; Murphy, RM; Perry, BD; Anderson, M
J APPL PHYSIOL - 01 Nov 2016
Physical training increases skeletal muscle Na+,K+-ATPase content (NKA) and improves exercise performance, but the effects of inactivity per se on NKA content and isoform abundance in human muscle are unknown. We investigated the effects of 23-day unilateral lower limb suspension (ULLS) and subsequent 4-wk resistance training (RT) on muscle function and NKA in 6 healthy adults, measuring quadri...
Transcriptome analysis of neutrophils after endurance exercise reveals novel signaling mechanisms in the immune response to physiological stress
Wagner, KH; Bulmer, AC; Lazarus, R; Peake, JM; Haseler, LJ; Neubauer, O; Desbrow, B; Sabapathy, S; Cameron-Smith, D; Jowett, JB
J APPL PHYSIOL - 15 Jun 2013
Neutrophils serve as an intriguing model for the study of innate immune cellular activity induced by physiological stress. We measured changes in the transcriptome of circulating neutrophils following an experimental exercise trial (EXTRI) consisting of 1 h of intense cycling immediately followed by 1 h of intense running. Blood samples were taken at baseline, 3 h, 48 h, and 96 h post-EXTRI fro...
Role of Nox2 in diabetic kidney disease
Ly, S; Namikoshi, T; Barit, D; Jandeleit-Dahm, K; You, YH; Sharma, K; Okada, S
AM J PHYSIOL RENAL PHYSIOL - 01 Apr 2013
NADPH oxidase (Nox) isoforms have been implicated in contributing to diabetic microvascular complications, but the functional role of individual isoforms in diabetic kidney are unclear. Nox2, in particular, is highly expressed in phagocytes and may play a key inflammatory role in diabetic kidney disease. To determine the role of Nox2, we evaluated kidney function and pathology in wild-type (WT;...
Renal oxygenation in acute renal ischemia-reperfusion injury
Rajapakse, NW; Schlaich, MP; Ow, CP; Abdelkader, A; Evans, RG; Eppel, GA; Ho, J
AM J PHYSIOL RENAL PHYSIOL - 01 May 2014
Tissue hypoxia has been demonstrated, in both the renal cortex and medulla, during the acute phase of reperfusion after ischemia induced by occlusion of the aorta upstream from the kidney. However, there are also recent clinical observations indicating relatively well preserved oxygenation in the nonfunctional transplanted kidney. To test whether severe acute kidney injury can occur in the abse...
Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 mediates hyperfiltration associated with diabetes
Tikellis, C; Cooper, ME; Head, GA; Thomas, MC; Brown, R
AM J PHYSIOL RENAL PHYSIOL - 01 Apr 2014
The degradation of ANG II by angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), leading to the formation of ANG(1-7), is an important step in the regulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), and one that is significantly altered in the diabetic kidney. This study examined the role of ACE2 in the hyperfiltration associated with diabetes. Streptozotocin diabetes was induced in male C57BL6 ...
Calibrated variability of muscle sympathetic nerve activity during graded head-up tilt in humans and its link with noradrenaline data and cardiovascular rhythms
Baumert, M; Bari, V; Porta, A; De Maria, B; Esler, M; Marchi, A; Lambert, E
AM J PHYSIOL REGUL INTEGR COMP - 01 Jun 2016
Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) variability is traditionally computed through a low-pass filtering procedure that requires normalization. We proposed a new beat-to-beat MSNA variability computation that preserves dimensionality typical of an integrated neural discharge (i.e., bursts per unit of time). The calibrated MSNA (cMSNA) variability technique is contrasted with the traditional ...
Accelerated age-related decline in renal and vascular function in female rats following early-life growth restriction
Flower, RL; Parkington, HC; Black, MJ; Sampson, AK; Lim, K; Tare, M; Denton, KM; Bubb, KJ; Zimanyi, MA
AM J PHYSIOL REGUL INTEGR COMP - 01 Nov 2015
Many studies report sexual dimorphism in the fetal programming of adult disease. We hypothesized that there would be differences in the age-related decline in renal function between male and female intrauterine growth-restricted rats. Early-life growth restriction was induced in rat offspring by administering a low-protein diet (LPD; 8.7% casein) to dams during pregnancy and lactation. Control ...
The arterial depressor response to chronic low-dose angiotensin II infusion in female rats is estrogen dependent
Widdop, RE; Tikellis, C; Hilliard, LM; Sampson, AK; Denton, KM; Thomas, MC
AM J PHYSIOL REGUL INTEGR COMP - 01 Jan 2012
The complex role of the renin-angiotensin-system (RAS) in arterial pressure regulation has been well documented. Recently, we demonstrated that chronic low-dose angiotensin II (ANG II) infusion decreases arterial pressure in female rats via an AT(2)R-mediated mechanism. Estrogen can differentially regulate components of the RAS and is known to influence arterial pressure regulation. We hypothes...
Does lack of glutathione peroxidase 1 gene expression exacerbate lung injury induced by neonatal hyperoxia in mice?
Harding, R; Bouch, S; de Haan, JB; Sozo, F; O'Reilly, M
AM J PHYSIOL LUNG CELL MOL PHYSIOL - 01 Jul 2017
Supplemental oxygen (O2) increases the risk of lung injury in preterm infants, owing to an immature antioxidant system. Our objective was to determine whether impairing antioxidant defense by decreasing glutathione peroxidase 1 (GPx1) gene expression increases the injurious effects of hyperoxia (Hyp). GPx1+/+ and GPx1-/- C57Bl/6J mice were exposed to 21% O2 (Air) or 40% O2 (Hyp) from birth to p...
Comparison of sympathetic nerve activity normalization procedures in conscious rabbits
Moretti, JL; Lim, K; Burke, SL; Head, GA
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 May 2016
One of the main constraints associated with recording sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in both humans and experimental animals is that microvolt values reflect characteristics of the recording conditions and limit comparisons between different experimental groups. The nasopharyngeal response has been validated for normalizing renal SNA (RSNA) in conscious rabbits, and in humans muscle SNA is no...
Recording sympathetic nerve activity in conscious humans and other mammals: guidelines and the road to standardization
Hamza, SM; Wallin, BG; Head, GA; Hall, JE; Carter, JR; Hart, EC; Charkoudian, N; Osborn, JW; May, CN
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 May 2017
Over the past several decades, studies of the sympathetic nervous system in humans, sheep, rabbits, rats, and mice have substantially increased mechanistic understanding of cardiovascular function and dysfunction. Recently, interest in sympathetic neural mechanisms contributing to blood pressure control has grown, in part because of the development of devices or surgical procedures that treat h...
Low intrinsic exercise capacity in rats predisposes to age-dependent cardiac remodeling independent of macrovascular function
Hawley, JA; Koch, LG; Leo, CH; Ritchie, RH; Bowden, MA; Lessard, SJ; Qin, C; Woodman, OL; Stephenson, EJ; Britton, SL; Buxton, KD; Rivas, DA
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 Mar 2013
Rats selectively bred for low (LCR) or high (HCR) intrinsic running capacity simultaneously present with contrasting risk factors for cardiovascular and metabolic disease. However, the impact of these phenotypes on left ventricular (LV) morphology and microvascular function, and their progression with aging, remains unresolved. We tested the hypothesis that the LCR phenotype induces progressive...
HNO/cGMP-dependent antihypertrophic actions of isopropylamine-NONOate in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes: potential therapeutic advantages of HNO over NO
Irvine, JC; Alexander, AE; Kemp-Harper, BK; Ritchie, RH; Cao, N; Gossain, S; Qin, C; Horowitz, JD; Love, JE
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 Aug 2013
Nitroxyl (HNO) is a redox congener of NO. We now directly compare the antihypertrophic efficacy of HNO and NO donors in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes and compare their contributing mechanisms of actions in this setting. Isopropylamine-NONOate (IPA-NO) elicited concentration-dependent inhibition of endothelin-1 (ET1)-induced increases in cardiomyocyte size, with similar suppression of hypertrophic...
Disruption of phase synchronization between blood pressure and muscle sympathetic nerve activity in postural vasovagal syncope
Stewart, JM; Schwartz, CE; Medow, MS; Lambert, E
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 15 Oct 2013
Withdrawal of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) may not be necessary for the precipitous fall of peripheral arterial resistance and arterial pressure (AP) during vasovagal syncope (VVS). We tested the hypothesis that the MSNA-AP baroreflex entrainment is disrupted before VVS regardless of MSNA withdrawal using the phase synchronization between blood pressure and MSNA during head-up tilt ...
Sympathetic nervous response to ischemia-reperfusion injury in humans is altered with remote ischemic preconditioning
Schlaich, MP; Eikelis, N; Thomas, CJ; Lambert, EA; Hemmes, R; Pathak, A; Lambert, GW
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 Aug 2016
Sympathetic neural activation may be detrimentally involved in tissue injury caused by ischemia-reperfusion (IR). We examined the effects of experimental IR in the forearm on sympathetic nerve response, finger reactive hyperemia, and oxidative stress, and the protection afforded by applying remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC). Ischemia was induced in the forearm for 20 min in healthy volunte...
Relation between QT interval variability and muscle sympathetic nerve activity in normal subjects
Baumert, M; El-Hamad, F; Abbott, D; Lambert, E
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 Oct 2015
Beat-to-beat variability of the QT interval (QTV) is sought to provide an indirect noninvasive measure of sympathetic nerve activity, but a formal quantification of this relationship has not been provided. In this study we used power contribution analysis to study the relationship between QTV and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA). ECG and MSNA were recorded in 10 healthy subjects in the ...
Microvascular leakage in acute myocardial infarction: characterization by histology, biochemistry, and magnetic resonance imaging
Su, Y; Wu, QZ; Du, XJ; Han, LP; Gao, XM; Taylor, AJ; Kiriazis, H; Pearson, JT
AM J PHYSIOL HEART CIRC PHYSIOL - 01 May 2017
Cardiac microvascular obstruction (MVO) after ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) has been well studied, but microvascular leakage (MVL) remains largely unexplored. We characterized MVL in the mouse I/R model by histology, biochemistry, and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. I/R was induced surgically in mice. MVL was determined by administrating the microvascular permeability tracer Evans blue (...
Marked phenotypic differences of endurance performance and exercise-induced oxygen consumption between AMPK and LKB1 deficiency in mouse skeletal muscle: changes occurring in the diaphragm
Tokutake, Y; Sakamoto, K; Ezaki, O; Febbraio, MA; Kita, K; Kai, Y; Tadaishi, M; Chohnan, S; Miura, S; Bruce, CR
AM J PHYSIOL ENDOCRINOL METAB - 15 Jul 2013
LKB1 phosphorylates members of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) family. LKB1 and AMPK in the skeletal muscle are believed to regulate not only fuel oxidation during exercise but also exercise capacity. LKB1 was also required to prevent diaphragm fatigue, which was shown to affect exercise performance. Using mice expressing dominant negative (DN) mutants of LKB1 and AMPK, specifically in ...
Does the type of activity "break" from prolonged sitting differentially impact on postprandial blood glucose reductions? An exploratory analysis
Owen, N; Dunstan, DW; Grace, M; Larsen, RN; Kingwell, BA; Dempsey, PC; Dillon, F
APPL PHYSIOL NUTR METAB - 01 Aug 2017
Frequent breaks in prolonged sitting are associated beneficially with glycaemic control. However, the contribution of energy expenditure to this relationship has not been well characterised. In this exploratory analysis, data from 3 laboratory trials that standardised test meals, cohort characteristics (overweight/obese, sedentary), and break frequency and duration were pooled. Higher energy ex...
Responses to antismoking radio and television advertisements among adult smokers and non-smokers across Africa: message-testing results from Senegal, Nigeria and Kenya
Lien, M; Mullin, S; Murukutla, N; Occleston, J; Perl, R; Wakefield, M; Bayly, M
TOB CONTROL - 01 Nov 2015
BACKGROUND: This study examined whether adaptation of existing antitobacco television and radio advertisements (ads) from high-income countries is a viable tobacco control strategy for Africa. METHODS: 1078 male and female adult smokers and non-smokers, aged 18-40 years, from major and smaller urban locations in Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal, were recruited into groups using locally appropr...
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