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Aerobic conditioning in patients with mitochondrial myopathies: Physiological, biochemical, and genetic effects

202

Citations

36

References

2001

Year

TLDR

Aerobic training improves work and oxidative capacity in mitochondrial myopathy patients, yet the mechanisms remain unclear and the long‑term impact of increased mutant versus wild‑type mtDNA requires further evaluation. The study aimed to evaluate physiological, biochemical, and genetic responses to 14 weeks of bicycle exercise training in ten patients with heteroplasmic mitochondrial DNA mutations. Researchers conducted 14 weeks of bicycle training while measuring cycle exercise performance, 31.

Abstract

Abstract Aerobic training has been shown to increase work and oxidative capacity in patients with mitochondrial myopathies, but the mechanisms underlying improvement are not known. We evaluated physiological (cycle exercise, 31 P‐MRS), biochemical (enzyme levels), and genetic (proportion of mutant/wild‐type genomes) responses to 14 weeks of bicycle exercise training in 10 patients with heteroplasmic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations. Training increased peak work and oxidative capacities (20–30%), systemic arteriovenous O 2 difference (20%), and 31 P‐MRS indices of metabolic recovery (35%), consistent with enhanced muscle oxidative phosphorylation. Mitochondrial volume in vastus lateralis biopsies increased significantly (50%) and increases in deficient respiratory chain enzymes were found in patients with Complex I (36%) and Complex IV (25%) defects, whereas decreases occurred in 2 patients with Complex III defects (‐20%). These results suggest that the cellular basis of improved oxygen utilization is related to training‐induced mitochondrial proliferation likely resulting in increased levels of functional, wild‐type mtDNA. However, genetic analysis indicated the proportion of wild‐type mtDNA was unchanged (3/9) or fell (6/9), suggesting a trend toward preferential proliferation of mutant genomes. The long‐term implications of training‐induced increases in mutant relative to wild‐type mtDNA, despite positive physiological and biochemical findings, need to be assessed before aerobic training can be proposed as a general treatment option.

References

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