Paulo R. Jannig
University of São Paulo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paulo R. Jannig.
The Journal of Physiology | 2016
Felipe Damas; Stuart M. Phillips; Cleiton Augusto Libardi; Felipe Cassaro Vechin; Manoel E. Lixandrão; Paulo R. Jannig; Luiz Augusto Riani Costa; Aline V. N. Bacurau; Tim Snijders; Gianni Parise; Valmor Tricoli; Hamilton Roschel; Carlos Ugrinowitsch
Skeletal muscle hypertrophy is one of the main outcomes from resistance training (RT), but how it is modulated throughout training is still unknown. We show that changes in myofibrillar protein synthesis (MyoPS) after an initial resistance exercise (RE) bout in the first week of RT (T1) were greater than those seen post‐RE at the third (T2) and tenth week (T3) of RT, with values being similar at T2 and T3. Muscle damage (Z‐band streaming) was the highest during post‐RE recovery at T1, lower at T2 and minimal at T3. When muscle damage was the highest, so was the integrated MyoPS (at T1), but neither were related to hypertrophy; however, integrated MyoPS at T2 and T3 were correlated with hypertrophy. We conclude that muscle hypertrophy is the result of accumulated intermittent increases in MyoPS mainly after a progressive attenuation of muscle damage.
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2013
José Bianco Nascimento Moreira; Luiz Roberto Grassmann Bechara; Luiz Henrique Marchesi Bozi; Paulo R. Jannig; Alex Willian Arantes Monteiro; Paulo Magno Martins Dourado; Ulrik Wisløff; Patricia C. Brum
Poor skeletal muscle performance was shown to strongly predict mortality and long-term prognosis in a variety of diseases, including heart failure (HF). Despite the known benefits of aerobic exercise training (AET) in improving the skeletal muscle phenotype in HF, the optimal exercise intensity to elicit maximal outcomes is still under debate. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to compare the effects of high-intensity AET with those of a moderate-intensity protocol on skeletal muscle of infarcted rats. Wistar rats underwent myocardial infarction (MI) or sham surgery. MI groups were submitted either to an untrained (MI-UNT); moderate-intensity (MI-CMT, 60% Vo(2)(max)); or matched volume, high-intensity AET (MI-HIT, intervals at 85% Vo(2)(max)) protocol. High-intensity AET (HIT) was superior to moderate-intensity AET (CMT) in improving aerobic capacity, assessed by treadmill running tests. Cardiac contractile function, measured by echocardiography, was equally improved by both AET protocols. CMT and HIT prevented the MI-induced decay of skeletal muscle citrate synthase and hexokinase maximal activities, and increased glycogen content, without significant differences between protocols. Similar improvements in skeletal muscle redox balance and deactivation of the ubiquitin-proteasome system were also observed after CMT and HIT. Such intracellular findings were accompanied by prevented skeletal muscle atrophy in both MI-CMT and MI-HIT groups, whereas no major differences were observed between protocols. Taken together, our data suggest that despite superior effects of HIT in improving functional capacity, skeletal muscle adaptations were remarkably similar among protocols, leading to the conclusion that skeletal myopathy in infarcted rats was equally prevented by either moderate-intensity or high-intensity AET.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2014
Luiz Roberto Grassmann Bechara; José Bianco Nascimento Moreira; Paulo R. Jannig; Vanessa A. Voltarelli; Paulo Magno Martins Dourado; Andrea Rodrigues Vasconcelos; Cristoforo Scavone; Paulo Rizzo Ramires; Patricia C. Brum
BACKGROUND Skeletal muscle wasting is associated with poor prognosis and increased mortality in heart failure (HF) patients. Glycolytic muscles are more susceptible to catabolic wasting than oxidative ones. This is particularly important in HF since glycolytic muscle wasting is associated with increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, the main ROS sources involved in muscle redox imbalance in HF have not been characterized. Therefore, we hypothesized that NADPH oxidases would be hyperactivated in the plantaris muscle of infarcted rats, contributing to oxidative stress and hyperactivation of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS), ultimately leading to atrophy. METHODS Rats were submitted to myocardial infarction (MI) or Sham surgery. Four weeks after surgery, MI and Sham groups underwent eight weeks of treatment with apocynin, a NADPH oxidase inhibitor, or placebo. NADPH oxidase activity, oxidative stress markers, NF-κB activity, p38 MAPK phosphorylation, mRNA and sarcolemmal protein levels of NADPH oxidase components, UPS activation and fiber cross-sectional area were assessed in the plantaris muscle. RESULTS The plantaris of MI rats displayed atrophy associated with increased Nox2 mRNA and sarcolemmal protein levels, NADPH oxidase activity, ROS production, lipid hydroperoxides levels, NF-κB activity, p38 MAPK phosphorylation and UPS activation. NADPH oxidase inhibition by apocynin prevented MI-induced skeletal muscle atrophy by reducing ROS production, NF-κB hyperactivation, p38 MAPK phosphorylation and proteasomal hyperactivity. CONCLUSION Our data provide evidence for NADPH oxidase hyperactivation as an important source of ROS production leading to plantaris atrophy in heart failure rats, suggesting that this enzyme complex plays key role in skeletal muscle wasting in HF.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Paulo R. Jannig; José Bianco Nascimento Moreira; Luiz Roberto Grassmann Bechara; Luiz Henrique Marchesi Bozi; Aline Villa Nova Bacurau; Alex Willian Arantes Monteiro; Paulo Magno Martins Dourado; Ulrik Wisløff; Patricia C. Brum
Background Heart failure (HF)-induced skeletal muscle atrophy is often associated to exercise intolerance and poor prognosis. Better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying HF-induced muscle atrophy may contribute to the development of pharmacological strategies to prevent or treat such condition. It has been shown that autophagy-lysosome system is an important mechanism for maintenance of muscle mass. However, its role in HF-induced myopathy has not been addressed yet. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to evaluate autophagy signaling in myocardial infarction (MI)-induced muscle atrophy in rats. Methods/Principal Findings Wistar rats underwent MI or Sham surgeries, and after 12 weeks were submitted to echocardiography, exercise tolerance and histology evaluations. Cathepsin L activity and expression of autophagy-related genes and proteins were assessed in soleus and plantaris muscles by fluorimetric assay, qRT-PCR and immunoblotting, respectively. MI rats displayed exercise intolerance, left ventricular dysfunction and dilation, thereby suggesting the presence of HF. The key findings of the present study were: a) upregulation of autophagy-related genes (GABARAPL1, ATG7, BNIP3, CTSL1 and LAMP2) was observed only in plantaris while muscle atrophy was observed in both soleus and plantaris muscles, and b) Cathepsin L activity, Bnip3 and Fis1 protein levels, and levels of lipid hydroperoxides were increased specifically in plantaris muscle of MI rats. Conclusions Altogether our results provide evidence for autophagy signaling regulation in HF-induced plantaris atrophy but not soleus atrophy. Therefore, autophagy-lysosome system is differentially regulated in atrophic muscles comprising different fiber-types and metabolic characteristics.
Revista Brasileira De Medicina Do Esporte | 2009
Paulo R. Jannig; Ana Claudia Cardoso; Eriberto Fleischmann; Carla Werlang Coelho; Tales de Carvalho
Existem evidencias de que exercicios resistidos contribuem para o controle de hipertensao arterial sistemica, porem, sao necessarios estudos que indiquem a melhor forma de utiliza-los. O objetivo deste estudo foi analisar a influencia da ordem de execucao de exercicios resistidos na hipotensao pos-exercicio em idosos com hipertensao arterial bem controlada. A amostra foi composta por oito idosos com hipertensao arterial sistemica bem controlada (quatro homens e quatro mulheres). No protocolo 1 (P1) foram realizados inicialmente tres exercicios para membros superiores e, posteriormente, tres exercicios para membros inferiores. No protocolo 2 (P2) a sequencia foi inversa. Ja no protocolo 3 (P3) os exercicios foram realizados de forma alternada. Todos os exercicios foram realizados em tres series de 12 RM. Apos cada protocolo a pressao arterial (PA) foi verificada em intervalos de 10 minutos, ate 60 minutos pos-exercicio. Os dados obtidos foram analisados atraves da ANOVA de fator duplo e fator unico com post-hoc de Tukey e teste t de Student pareado com distribuicao bicaudal (p < 0,05). Em relacao ao repouso, as seis verificacoes de PA pos-exercicio de P1 nao apresentaram diferencas significativas; no P2 foram significantemente diferentes apenas as verificacoes de 20 e 40 minutos na PAS; no P3 foram observadas diferencas significativas em todas as seis verificacoes da PAS e nas de 10, 20, 30 e 60 minutos da PAD. A verificacao de 20 minutos na PAD do P3 demonstrou-se significantemente diferente das de 20 minutos de P1 e P2. Conclui-se que a ordem de realizacao de exercicios resistidos em idosos com hipertensao arterial bem controlada influenciou na duracao da resposta hipotensiva, mas nao diretamente em sua magnitude.
Science Translational Medicine | 2016
Heba Salah; Nicola Cacciani; Stefano Gastaldello; Hannah Ogilvie; Hazem Akkad; Arvind Venkat Namuduri; Valeria Morbidoni; Konstantin A. Artemenko; Gábor Balogh; Vicente Martínez-Redondo; Paulo R. Jannig; Yvette Hedström; Barry R. Dworkin; Jonas Bergquist; Jorge L. Ruas; László Vígh; Leonardo Salviati; Lars Larsson
BGP-15 reduces ventilation-induced diaphragm dysfunction by improving diaphragm fiber and myosin function and enhancing mitochondrial activity. A little help for the diaphragm Ventilation-induced diaphragm dysfunction is a common complication of intensive care, where mechanically ventilated patients have to be gradually weaned off ventilator support over an extended period of time until they are finally strong enough to breathe on their own. Salah et al. used a rat model to study the detailed effects of prolonged mechanical ventilation on diaphragm muscles and demonstrate the beneficial effects of a pharmacological intervention with a heat shock protein co-inducer. Through a combination of effects on lipid rafts, mitochondrial efficiency, and other cellular functions, this treatment improved diaphragm muscle force-generating capacity even after multiple days of mechanical ventilation. Ventilation-induced diaphragm dysfunction (VIDD) is a marked decline in diaphragm function in response to mechanical ventilation, which has negative consequences for individual patients’ quality of life and for the health care system, but specific treatment strategies are still lacking. We used an experimental intensive care unit (ICU) model, allowing time-resolved studies of diaphragm structure and function in response to long-term mechanical ventilation and the effects of a pharmacological intervention (the chaperone co-inducer BGP-15). The marked loss of diaphragm muscle fiber function in response to mechanical ventilation was caused by posttranslational modifications (PTMs) of myosin. In a rat model, 10 days of BGP-15 treatment greatly improved diaphragm muscle fiber function (by about 100%), although it did not reverse diaphragm atrophy. The treatment also provided protection from myosin PTMs associated with HSP72 induction and PARP-1 inhibition, resulting in improvement of mitochondrial function and content. Thus, BGP-15 may offer an intervention strategy for reducing VIDD in mechanically ventilated ICU patients.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Vicente Martínez-Redondo; Paulo R. Jannig; Jorge C. Correia; Duarte M.S. Ferreira; Igor Cervenka; Jessica M. Lindvall; Indranil Sinha; Manizheh Izadi; Amanda T. Pettersson-Klein; Leandro Z. Agudelo; Alfredo Giménez-Cassina; Patricia C. Brum; Karin Dahlman-Wright; Jorge L. Ruas
Endurance and resistance exercise training induces specific and profound changes in the skeletal muscle transcriptome. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator-1 α (PGC-1α) coactivators are not only among the genes differentially induced by distinct training methods, but they also participate in the ensuing signaling cascades that allow skeletal muscle to adapt to each type of exercise. Although endurance training preferentially induces PGC-1α1 expression, resistance exercise activates the expression of PGC-1α2, -α3, and -α4. These three alternative PGC-1α isoforms lack the arginine/serine-rich (RS) and RNA recognition motifs characteristic of PGC-1α1. Discrete functions for PGC-1α1 and -α4 have been described, but the biological role of PGC-1α2 and -α3 remains elusive. Here we show that different PGC-1α variants can affect target gene splicing through diverse mechanisms, including alternative promoter usage. By analyzing the exon structure of the target transcripts for each PGC-1α isoform, we were able to identify a large number of previously unknown PGC-1α2 and -α3 target genes and pathways in skeletal muscle. In particular, PGC-1α2 seems to mediate a decrease in the levels of cholesterol synthesis genes. Our results suggest that the conservation of the N-terminal activation and repression domains (and not the RS/RNA recognition motif) is what determines the gene programs and splicing options modulated by each PGC-1α isoform. By using skeletal muscle-specific transgenic mice for PGC-1α1 and -α4, we could validate, in vivo, splicing events observed in in vitro studies. These results show that alternative PGC-1α variants can affect target gene expression both quantitatively and qualitatively and identify novel biological pathways under the control of this system of coactivators.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2016
Luiz Henrique Marchesi Bozi; Paulo R. Jannig; Natale Rolim; Vanessa A. Voltarelli; Paulo Magno Martins Dourado; Ulrik Wisløff; Patricia C. Brum
Cardiac endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress through accumulation of misfolded proteins plays a pivotal role in cardiovascular diseases. In an attempt to reestablish ER homoeostasis, the unfolded protein response (UPR) is activated. However, if ER stress persists, sustained UPR activation leads to apoptosis. There is no available therapy for ER stress relief. Considering that aerobic exercise training (AET) attenuates oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and calcium imbalance, it may be a potential strategy to reestablish cardiac ER homoeostasis. We test the hypothesis that AET would attenuate impaired cardiac ER stress after myocardial infarction (MI). Wistar rats underwent to either MI or sham surgeries. Four weeks later, rats underwent to 8 weeks of moderate‐intensity AET. Myocardial infarction rats displayed cardiac dysfunction and lung oedema, suggesting heart failure. Cardiac dysfunction in MI rats was paralleled by increased protein levels of UPR markers (GRP78, DERLIN‐1 and CHOP), accumulation of misfolded and polyubiquitinated proteins, and reduced chymotrypsin‐like proteasome activity. These results suggest an impaired cardiac protein quality control. Aerobic exercise training improved exercise capacity and cardiac function of MI animals. Interestingly, AET blunted MI‐induced ER stress by reducing protein levels of UPR markers, and accumulation of both misfolded and polyubiquinated proteins, which was associated with restored proteasome activity. Taken together, our study provide evidence for AET attenuation of ER stress through the reestablishment of cardiac protein quality control, which contributes to better cardiac function in post‐MI heart failure rats. These results reinforce the importance of AET as primary non‐pharmacological therapy to cardiovascular disease.
Autophagy | 2017
Juliane C. Campos; Bruno B. Queliconi; Luiz Henrique Marchesi Bozi; Luiz Roberto Grassmann Bechara; Paulo Magno Martins Dourado; Allen M. Andres; Paulo R. Jannig; Katia M.S. Gomes; Vanessa O. Zambelli; Cibele Rocha-Resende; Silvia Guatimosim; Patricia C. Brum; Daria Mochly-Rosen; Roberta A. Gottlieb; Alicia J. Kowaltowski; Julio Cesar Batista Ferreira
ABSTRACT We previously reported that facilitating the clearance of damaged mitochondria through macroautophagy/autophagy protects against acute myocardial infarction. Here we characterize the impact of exercise, a safe strategy against cardiovascular disease, on cardiac autophagy and its contribution to mitochondrial quality control, bioenergetics and oxidative damage in a post-myocardial infarction-induced heart failure animal model. We found that failing hearts displayed reduced autophagic flux depicted by accumulation of autophagy-related markers and loss of responsiveness to chloroquine treatment at 4 and 12 wk after myocardial infarction. These changes were accompanied by accumulation of fragmented mitochondria with reduced O2 consumption, elevated H2O2 release and increased Ca2+-induced mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening. Of interest, disruption of autophagic flux was sufficient to decrease cardiac mitochondrial function in sham-treated animals and increase cardiomyocyte toxicity upon mitochondrial stress. Importantly, 8 wk of exercise training, starting 4 wk after myocardial infarction at a time when autophagy and mitochondrial oxidative capacity were already impaired, improved cardiac autophagic flux. These changes were followed by reduced mitochondrial number:size ratio, increased mitochondrial bioenergetics and better cardiac function. Moreover, exercise training increased cardiac mitochondrial number, size and oxidative capacity without affecting autophagic flux in sham-treated animals. Further supporting an autophagy mechanism for exercise-induced improvements of mitochondrial bioenergetics in heart failure, acute in vivo inhibition of autophagic flux was sufficient to mitigate the increased mitochondrial oxidative capacity triggered by exercise in failing hearts. Collectively, our findings uncover the potential contribution of exercise in restoring cardiac autophagy flux in heart failure, which is associated with better mitochondrial quality control, bioenergetics and cardiac function.
Clinics | 2013
Carla Werlang Coelho; Paulo R. Jannig; Arlete B. de Souza; Hercilio Fronza; Glauco Adrieno Westphal; Fabricia Petronilho; Larissa Constantino; Felipe Dal-Pizzol; Gabriela K. Ferreira; Emilio E. Streck; Eliezer Silva
OBJECTIVE: Oxidative stress plays an important role in skeletal muscle damage in sepsis. Aerobic exercise can decrease oxidative stress and enhance antioxidant defenses. Therefore, it was hypothesized that aerobic exercise training before a sepsis stimulus could attenuate skeletal muscle damage by modulating oxidative stress. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of aerobic physical preconditioning on the different mechanisms that are involved in sepsis-induced myopathy. METHODS: Male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to either the untrained or trained group. The exercise training protocol consisted of an eight-week treadmill program. After the training protocol, the animals from both groups were randomly assigned to either a sham group or a cecal ligation and perforation surgery group. Thus, the groups were as follows: sham, cecal ligation and perforation, sham trained, and cecal ligation and perforation trained. Five days after surgery, the animals were euthanized and their soleus and plantaris muscles were harvested. Fiber cross-sectional area, creatine kinase, thiobarbituric acid reactive species, carbonyl, catalase and superoxide dismutase activities were measured. RESULTS: The fiber cross-sectional area was smaller, and the creatine kinase, thiobarbituric acid reactive species and carbonyl levels were higher in both muscles in the cecal ligation and perforation group than in the sham and cecal ligation and perforation trained groups. The muscle superoxide dismutase activity was higher in the cecal ligation and perforation trained group than in the sham and cecal ligation and perforation groups. The muscle catalase activity was lower in the cecal ligation and perforation group than in the sham group. CONCLUSION: In summary, aerobic physical preconditioning prevents atrophy, lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation and improves superoxide dismutase activity in the skeletal muscles of septic rats.
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José Bianco Nascimento Moreira
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
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