Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a common disease that causes serious liver damage. Exercise is recognized as a non-pharmacological tool to improve the pathology of NAFLD. However, the antioxidative effects and mechanisms by which exercise ameliorates NAFLD remain unclear. The present study conducted exercise training on zebrafish during a 12-week high-fat feeding period to study the antioxidant effect of exercise on the liver. We found that swimming exercise decreased lipid accumulation and improved pathological changes in the liver of high-fat diet-fed zebrafish. Moreover, swimming alleviated NOX4-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction and reduced methanedicarboxylic aldehyde (MDA) levels. We also examined the anti-apoptotic effects of swimming and found that it increased the expression of antiapoptotic factor bcl2 and decreased the expression of genes associated with apoptosis (caspase3, bax). Mechanistically, swimming intervention activated SIRT1/AMPK signaling-mediated lipid metabolism and inflammation as well as enhanced AKT and NRF2 activation and upregulated downstream antioxidant genes. In summary, exercise attenuates pathological changes in the liver induced by high-fat diets. The underlying mechanisms might be related to NRF2 and mediated by SIRT1/AMPK signaling.
Highway engineers must conduct pavement evaluations before making rehabilitation decisions. Deflection tests performed at a uniform spacing are often used for structural evaluation purposes. The spacing between adjacent tests is often determined empirically. For pavements with large variability, more tests are needed. Variability is usually measured by the coefficient of variation ( CV). Several methods of determining test spacing were reviewed. A new method is proposed to calculate the test spacing based on the equivalent coefficient of variation ( CVe), which considers not only the variance but also the autocorrelation among the pavement responses. The new parameter CVe is more sensitive to test spacing than is the CV.
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