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The level of physical training modulates cytokine levels through P2X7 receptor in healthy subjects.

INTRODUCTION: The P2X7 receptor-NLRP3 inflammasome complex (P2X7R-Infl) regulates inflammatory and immune responses. Physical exercise modulates heat-shock proteins (Hsps), influencing cytokine levels and oxidative stress; Hsp72 triggers P2X7R-Infl-dependent responses.

SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We studied the effect of a single bout of maximal exercise on lymphomonocyte expression of P2X7R, NLRP3, caspase-1, NF-kB and Hsp72 and circulating levels of IL-1β, IL-18 and MCP-1, all modulated by P2X7R-Infl, in healthy sedentary (SED), trained (ATH), endurance (END) male individuals.

RESULTS: Baseline P2X7R, NLRP3 and Caspase-1 expression progressively increased from SED to ATH and END; NF-kβ showed the same trend. Hsp72 did not differ among groups. Acute exercise strongly reduced P2X7R in all participants, irrespective of their degree of physical training. Inflammasome responses differed across groups: in SED, NLRP3 and Caspase-1 increased; in ATH, NLRP3 reduced and caspase-1 did not vary; in END, NLRP3 and Caspase-1 declined. Baseline IL-1β, higher in END, was unmodified after exercise; IL-18 decreased; MCP-1 doubled in SED, did not vary in ATH, declined in END. In the whole study population, significant direct relationships emerged between P2X7R expression and IL-1β, IL-18, MCP-1 levels, all P < .001; also Caspase-1 related with these markers. A multivariate analysis showed age, BMI and P2X7R as determinants of postexercise IL-1β levels.

CONCLUSION: Endurance show higher P2X7R-Infl expression and function vs SED and ATH; however, maximal exercise determines prevailing pro-inflammatory vs anti-inflammatory responses in untrained and trained participants, respectively, highlighting a likely cause-effect relationship between degree of physical activity and P2X7R-Infl-mediated responses.

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