Exercise duration and detraining influence not only body weight but also histopathological changes in the white adipose tissue of young male OLETF rats as an obesity model
Kanta Sakakura, Susumu Urakawa, Naoto Fujita

TL;DR
Long-term exercise in young rats reduces fat tissue changes and obesity in adulthood, even if they stop exercising later.
Contribution
Shows that long-term early-life exercise reduces white adipose tissue changes more effectively than short-term exercise.
Findings
Long-term exercise reduced adipocyte hypertrophy and inflammation in white adipose tissue.
Long-term exercise led to lower adiposity in adulthood despite no significant body weight differences after detraining.
Short- and long-term exercise had similar effects on metabolic profiles like body weight.
Abstract
Environmental exposures during early life impact health and disease in later life. Therefore, understanding the effects of exercise during early life and detraining on obesity in adulthood may be valuable for preventing and treating obesity. This study aimed to examine the effects of short‐ and long‐term exercise and detraining during early life on the histological changes in adulthood. Four‐week‐old male Otsuka Long‐Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were used as an animal model of obesity. The OLETF rats were divided into the sedentary and exercise groups. The rats in the exercise group were further divided into two subgroups according to the exercise period: exercised from 4‐ to 8‐week‐old and non‐exercised from 8‐ to 20‐week‐old, and exercised from 4‐ to 12‐week‐old and non‐exercised from 12‐ to 20‐week‐old. The metabolic profiles in adulthood, such as body weight, did not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdipose Tissue and Metabolism · Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases · Birth, Development, and Health
