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Clinical Trial Summary

Exercise is the cornerstone of disease prevention and often an important component of treatment. However, the efficacy of an exercise stimulus is reduced with aging. This study will investigate whether adding a treatment with phytonutrients found in cruciferous vegetables can improve the exercise response in older individuals.


Clinical Trial Description

Redox balance plays a key role in the age-associated increased risk for diseases. One reason for the lower resistance to oxidative stress with age is a gradual shift in the redox state toward a more oxidized cellular environment resulting in disruption of cell signaling. Nuclear erythroid factor 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) is the master regulator of antioxidant defenses. Nrf2 drives expression of a host of genes involved in cytoprotection and antioxidant defenses. The Traustadottir lab was the first to demonstrate Nrf2 activation in response to acute exercise in humans, and in agreement with animal data, found an age-related impairment in exercise-induced Nrf2 signaling. This underscores an important problem related to aging, namely that older individuals are less sensitive to an exercise stimulus compared to younger cohorts. The focus of the proposed study is to try to solve this problem by amplifying the signal and mitigating the "exercise desensitization" exhibited by older individuals to restore redox balance. This study will test the hypothesis that combining acute exercise with sulforaphane will improve Nrf2 activation and downstream signaling in older adults compared to either alone. Sulforaphane (SFN) is a phytonutrient found in high concentrations in cruciferous vegetables and a potent Nrf2 activator. The hypothesis will be tested using two different approaches; the first experiment will use an in vivo-ex vivo approach, where peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) collected from older men and women (≥60y, n=30) pre- and post-acute exercise (in vivo) will be cultured and stimulated with SFN (ex vivo). This allows for a greater experimental control of the SFN stimulus. The second experiment will test the clinical translation applying the sulforaphane stimulus in vivo through an oral supplementation of sulforaphane in the form of whole broccoli sprout material, prior to acute exercise, in the same individuals. This second experiment will be a randomized placebo-controlled cross-over design. For all trials Nrf2 signaling will be measured by Nrf2 activation through an ARE binding assay, nuclear to whole cell ratio of Nrf2 protein, and Nrf2-dependent gene expression (HO-1, GCLC, NQO1, GR). Potential sex differences will be investigated. The insights gained from this study are whether combining simple interventions in the category of healthy lifestyle and preventive medicine can improve the adaptive response to exercise in older individuals. This could have an enormous impact by improving the health and well-being of older Americans. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04848792
Study type Interventional
Source Northern Arizona University
Contact Tinna Traustadóttir, PhD
Phone 9285237291
Email tinna.traustadottir@nau.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 9, 2023
Completion date June 30, 2024

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