Thirty-five serum proteins were associated with aerobic capacity and muscle strength in women 10 years after GDM, with five proteins (PON3, IGF1, CRISP3, COL6A3, C3) showing strongest associations with fitness and cardiometabolic health markers.
Observational
Yes
Are specific circulating serum proteins associated with physical fitness and cardiometabolic risk in women 10 years after gestational diabetes?
38 women with a history of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) 10 years prior (mean age 43.7, BMI 26.7) from the Swedish PONCH cohort, plus an independent validation cohort of 28 untrained, overweight/obese men (mean age 28.4, BMI 30.4).
Assessment of physical fitness (aerobic capacity and muscle strength) and serum proteomics. The independent validation cohort underwent 6 weeks of supervised aerobic training.
Identification of serum proteins associated with aerobic capacity (VO2peak) and muscle strength, and their correlation with cardiometabolic risk markers.surrogate
Specific serum proteins, including PON3, IGF1, CRISP3, COL6A3, and C3, are linked to physical fitness and cardiometabolic health in women after gestational diabetes, suggesting their potential as biomarkers for early metabolic dysfunction.
Women with prior gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) have an elevated risk of developing cardiometabolic diseases, including type 2-diabetes and cardiovascular disease. While physical fitness is protective, circulating molecular biomarkers linking fitness to long-term metabolic health in this population remain poorly understood. This study aimed to identify serum proteins associated with aerobic capacity and muscle strength 10 years after GDM, and explore their biological functions related to cardiometabolic risk. We assessed aerobic fitness (VO2peak), peak fat oxidation, and maximal isometric muscle strength of five muscle groups in 38 women from the post-GDM PONCH-cohort. Serum proteins were analysed using mass spectrometry-based proteomics. Associations between proteins, fitness variables, and clinical markers were tested using Spearman correlations with FDR correction, and age- and medication-adjusted sensitivity analysis. Group differences across four fitness-level groups (defined by aerobic fitness and muscle strength) and glycaemic status groups were analysed using linear regression models and Kruskal-Wallis tests, with age- and medication-adjusted sensitivity analyses. Exercise responsiveness of selected proteins was assessed in an independent cohort of untrained men undergoing six weeks of supervised aerobic training (n = 28), with pre-post changes assessed using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Thirty-five proteins were associated with at least one fitness variable, of which 21 remained significant after age- and medication-adjusted sensitivity analysis. Nine proteins correlated with both VO2peak and muscle strength. Identified proteins mapped to key cardiometabolic pathways, including metabolic regulation, immune response, complement activation, oxidative stress, and extracellular matrix remodelling. Five proteins (PON3, IGF1, CRISP3, COL6A3, C3) emerged as particularly interesting, showing the largest and most consistent effect sizes across fitness variables and associations with central adiposity, blood lipids, blood pressure, and insulin resistance. Stratified analysis across the four fitness-level groups identified IGF1, PON3, and PRG4 as markers of higher overall-fitness. In the independent training cohort, nine of the fitness-associated proteins changed following aerobic training without significant weight-loss. This study identified circulating proteins linked to physical fitness and cardiometabolic health in women after GDM. These findings suggest fitness-associated serum proteins may serve as biomarkers of early metabolic dysfunction and potential targets for exercise-based prevention of T2D and cardiovascular disease.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Emilia Kristiansson
Agneta Holmäng
Kristina Wallenius
Cardiovascular Diabetology
University of Gothenburg
AstraZeneca (Sweden)
Norwegian School of Sport Sciences
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Kristiansson et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Women 10 years after gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) with various fitness levels (n=38). No intervention; observational assessment of physical fitness and circulating proteins vs. Fitness-level groups (low aerobic capacity/low strength; low aerobic capacity/high strength; high aerobic capacity/low strength; high aerobic capacity/high strength) was evaluated on Association between circulating serum proteins and physical fitness variables (aerobic capacity - VO2peak, muscle strength) and cardiometabolic risk markers. Thirty-five serum proteins were associated with aerobic capacity and muscle strength in women 10 years after GDM, with five proteins (PON3, IGF1, CRISP3, COL6A3, C3) showing strongest associations with fitness and cardiometabolic health markers.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a528ecf1e85e5c73bf04b2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-026-03120-4