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Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise:
November 2004 - Volume 36 - Issue 11 - pp 1876-1883
Basic Sciences: Original Investigations

TLR4 Is Lower in Resistance-Trained Older Women and Related to Inflammatory Cytokines

MCFARLIN, BRIAN K.; FLYNN, MICHAEL G.; CAMPBELL, WAYNE W.; STEWART, LAURA K.; TIMMERMAN, KYLE L.

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Abstract

Introduction/Purpose: Regular exercise may offset age-associated increases in inflammatory cytokines and reduce the risk of developing diseases with an inflammatory etiology by exerting anti-inflammatory effects. Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) signaling stimulates inflammatory cytokine production, and may explain the anti-inflammatory effect attributed to regular exercise. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to compare the effect of acute (3 sets, 9 exercises, 10 repetitions at 80% of the 1-repetition maximum) and chronic resistance exercise on TLR4 and inflammatory cytokines.

Methods: Venous blood samples were collected from trained (TR, N = 10) and untrained (UT, N = 10) older (65-80 yr) postmenopausal women: before (PRE), immediately post (POST), and 2 h (2H), 6 h (6H), and 24 h (24H) after completion of exercise. Cell-surface expression of TLR4 (two-color immunofluorescent cytometry), LPS (25 μg·mL-1)-stimulated cytokine production (ELISA), plasma cytokines (ELISA), and mRNA expression of TLR4 and cytokines (RT-PCR) were determined for each sample.

Results: TR had 124% less cell-surface TLR4 expression than UT (P < 0.05). A significant time effect was found for LPS-stimulated IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α, where 6H was significantly greater than all other samples. No significant effects were found for plasma (IL-6 and TNF-α) or mRNA expression (IL-6, TNF-α, and IL-1β) of inflammatory cytokines. When subjects were grouped according to cell-surface TLR4 expression (HI and LO), LPS-stimulated TNF-α (302%), IL-1β (209%), and IL-6 (167%) production was greater for HI than LO (P < 0.05).

Conclusion: Regularly exercising older women expressed less cell-surface TLR4 but did not have lower plasma levels or produce less LPS-stimulated inflammatory cytokines at rest or in response to a single bout of resistance exercise. TLR4 changes may explain the anti-inflammatory effect that has recently been attributed to chronic (2× wk-1 for previous 24 months) resistance exercise training.

©2004The American College of Sports Medicine

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