Evaluation of Serum Autophagic Biomarkers in Acute Response to Walking and Cycling in Healthy Males
Summary
NIH ClinicalTrials.gov registered observational study NCT07536659 evaluating serum autophagic biomarkers in healthy male individuals responding to walking and cycling exercises. The study aims to assess acute cellular responses to different physical exercise modalities through peripheral blood analysis, building on limited existing human data in this area.
What changed
NIH ClinicalTrials.gov registered a new observational study (NCT07536659) examining how walking and cycling affect serum autophagic biomarkers in healthy male individuals. The study will collect peripheral blood samples to evaluate acute physiological responses to different exercise modalities.
For compliance officers and research institutions, this registration represents standard clinical research transparency requirements under NIH policy. Researchers conducting similar biomarker or exercise physiology studies should ensure their protocols align with emerging standards for indirect autophagy evaluation through circulating biomarkers.
Archived snapshot
Apr 17, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Evaluation of Serum Autophagic Biomarkers in the Acute Response to Walking and Cycling in Healthy Male Individuals
Observational NCT07536659 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 17, 2026
Abstract
Physical exercise (walking and cycling) is a potent physiological stimulus that simultaneously alters energy balance, mechanical loading, and metabolic demands in the organism. Autophagy is recognized as a fundamental mechanism in the regulation of acute cellular responses to such stimuli, playing a critical role in maintaining cellular homeostasis, removing damaged proteins and organelles, and ensuring metabolic adaptation [1]. Experimental and translational studies have demonstrated that particularly moderate-intensity and controlled mechanical loading can activate autophagic pathways, thereby supporting structural and functional adaptation in muscle, bone, and connective tissues [2-4].
In the current literature, the relationship between autophagy and exercise has largely been evaluated through experimental animal models and a limited number of human studies [5]. Although animal studies have clearly shown that physiological loading such as walking and running increases molecular signals associated with autophagy, the direct assessment of autophagy at the tissue level in humans is limited due to ethical and feasibility concerns, as it requires invasive methods (e.g., muscle biopsy) [3]. Therefore, recent human studies have increasingly focused on indirect evaluation of autophagy through peripheral blood mononuclear cells and circulating biomarkers [6].
Indeed, recent human studies have reported that proteins associated with autophagy may exhibit changes in per...
Conditions: Effects of Walking and Cycling on Serum Physiological Biomarkers Associated With Autophagy in Healthy Individuals
Interventions: WALKİNG
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