Skip to Content
Merck

Physical exercise stimulates salivary secretion of cystatins.

PloS one (2019-10-28)
Marcelo de Lima Sant'Anna, Leandro Teixeira Oliveira, Diego Viana Gomes, Sergio Tadeu Farinha Marques, D William Provance, Martha Meriwether Sorenson, Verônica Pinto Salerno
ABSTRACT

Physical exercise is known to activate the sympathetic nervous system, which influences the production of saliva from salivary glands. Our examination of saliva collected from highly trained athletes before and after a number of physical competititions showed an increase in the secretion of S-type cystatins and cystatin C as a subacute response to aerobic and anaerobic exercise. The elevation in salivary cystatins was transient and the recovery time course differed from that of amylase and other salivary proteins. An in vitro assay was developed based on a cell line from a human submandibular gland (HSG) that differentiated into acinus-like structures. Treatments with the β-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol caused a shift in the intracellular distribution of S-type cystatins and cystatin C, promoting their accumulation at the outer regions of the acinus prior to release and suggesting the activation of a directional transport involving co-migration of both molecules. In another treatment using non-differentiated HSG cells, it was evident that both expression and secretion of cystatin C increased upon addition of the β-adrenergic agonist, and these effects were essentially eliminated by the antagonist propranolol. The HSG cell line appears to have potential as a model for exploring the mechanism of cystatin secretion, particularly the S-type cystatins that originate primarily in the submandibular glands.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Human Cystatin C ELISA Kit, for serum, plasma, cell culture supernatant and urine