Comparative effects of different loads of aerobic exercise on lipid metabolism in MASLD rats: a perspective from the gut-liver axis
Deng Dongkun, Jiang Qingfeng, Li Chang, Lin Yunhua, Shi Jiaming, Liu Yufei, Xu Lin

TL;DR
This study explores how different intensities of aerobic exercise affect liver health in rats with fatty liver disease, focusing on gut and liver interactions.
Contribution
The study identifies optimal aerobic exercise loads for improving MASLD through the gut-liver axis and provides molecular insights into the mechanisms.
Findings
Medium- and high-load aerobic exercise improved lipid metabolism dysfunction more effectively than low-load exercise in MASLD rats.
Aerobic exercise restored gut barrier function and balanced gut-liver homeostasis in MASLD rats.
High-load aerobic exercise upregulated bile acid-related genes and modulated butyrate-producing gut bacteria.
Abstract
Exercise training has been shown to be effective in ameliorating obesity-related diseases, but the therapeutic effects of different loads of exercise on metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) as well as the underlying mechanisms by which exercise is based on the enterohepatic axis and thus alleviates MASLD are still unclear. Therefore, the present study aimed to clarify the optimal exercise load for improving MASLD and to reveal its molecular mechanisms in the treatment of metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MASLD) in the context of the enterohepatic axis. Forty male rats were randomly divided into two groups: NFD (n = 8) and HFD (n = 32). The rats in the NFD group were fed a normal chow, while those in the HFD group were fed a high-fat chow. Following an eight-week period of observation, the rats in the high-fat diet (HFD) group were separated into four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Diet and metabolism studies · Gut microbiota and health
