The study conducted in rats suggest that heart failure development is associated with disruption of cardiac protein quality control system and reinforce the importance of aerobic exercise training as a primary non-pharmacological therapy for treatment, researchers from Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) said.
Heart failure is a common endpoint for many cardiovascular diseases. This syndrome is characterised by reduced cardiac output that leads to dyspnea, exercise intolerance and later death, researchers said.
More than 20 million people worldwide are estimated to have heart failure and this situation will get worse since the prevalence of heart failure will rise as the mean age of the population increases, they said.
Proteins are constituted by a sequence of amino acids that determines the protein "shape" (structure), which is critical for proteins function, they said.
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During the evolution process, our cells developed a protein quality control system that refolds (when it is possible) or degrades misfolded proteins, allowing them to keep only the "good" (correctly folded) proteins.
In the study, researchers discovered that misfolded protein accumulation in a rat model of heart failure was related to disruption of the cardiac protein quality control system.
They verified that aerobic exercise training restored the cardiac protein quality control system, which was related to reduced misfolded protein accumulation and improved cardiac function in heart failure animals.
The results suggest that heart failure development is associated with disruption of cardiac protein quality control system and reinforce the importance of aerobic exercise training as a primary non-pharmacological therapy for treatment of heart failure patients, researchers said.