DOI: 10.1249/mss.0000000000003643 ISSN: 1530-0315

Acute and Lifelong Endurance Exercise Yields Differential Effects During Circadian Disruption in Mice

Cole F. Nelson, Cole R. Wyatt, Evan C. Johnson, William D. Todd, Emily E. Schmitt

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Circadian rhythms are responsible for physiological and behavioral processes coordinated in a 24-hour cycle. We investigated whether untimed, long-term voluntary wheel access mitigated circadian disruption and facilitated re-entrainment. Methods: Thirty-four C57Bl/6 J mice (n = 21 males, n = 14 females) were used in this experiment. Long-term exercised (LTEx) mice ran from 3 wks to 12 mo of age. At 12 mo animals were circadian disrupted for 14 d and then re-entrained for 7 d. Long-term sedentary (LTSed) animals were disrupted but had no access to a wheel. Another long-term sedentary group had access to a wheel only during disruption (LTSed+Ex). SubCue dataloggers were used to track internal rhythm of core body temperature (Tb). RNA was extracted from skeletal muscle and RT-qPCR was used to analyze gene expression. Results: Overall, all three experimental groups had an initial entrained period lengths of ~24 h at baseline. There was a main effect of time (p = 0.012), treatment (p = 0.005) and interaction of time x treatment (p = 0.033) from baseline to disruption. A post-hoc analysis within group one-way ANOVAs showed no difference between baseline and disruption period lengths in the LTSed+Ex treatment, yet a difference from baseline to disruption in LTSed and LTEx. Lastly, there is a difference in entrained period lengths between all three treatment groups at the re-entrainment time point (p = 0.026) with a difference in change between disruption and re-entrainment with LTEx being lower than LTSed+Ex. Conclusions: Our results suggest that acute-like exercise during circadian disruption aided in mitigating circadian disruption. When all treatment groups were re-entrained back to a normal rhythm, the LTEx animals that had access to a wheel prior to, during, and after disruption had period lengths closest to baseline values.

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