Conferences

16 June 2022, Online
Antioxidants Webinar | Exercise and Health

“Exercise is medicine” is a well-known mantra. With the continuous development of life science, exercise studies have entered a new era of expounding cellular and molecular mechanisms. Among them, redox-mitochondrial biology and medicine research has become the most active new growth point in current exercise science. Mitochondria are the “power station” and the center of cell signal regulation. Research in the past two to three decades has shown that mitochondria are the source and also the target of reactive oxygen species, and mitochondrial homeostasis plays an important role in aging and age-related diseases. Therefore, in-depth study of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of redox-mitochondrial homeostasis regulated by exercise will not only further clarify the effect of exercise on health but will also provide a theoretical basis for exercise to delay aging and prevent diseases, including metabolic disorder, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. This is undoubtedly the main intention behind this webinar on “Exercise and Health” by the Antioxidants journal.

The following experts will be present and talk:

  • Prof. Dr. Jiankang Liu, School of Health and Life Sciences, University of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Qingdao, China, School of Life Science and Technology, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, China
  • Prof. Dr. Yong Zhang, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Exercise, Physiology and Sports Medicine, Research Center for Exercise & Health Science, Tianjin University of Sport, Tianjin, China
  • Prof. Dr. Li Li Ji, School of Kinesiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Prof. Dr. Xing Zhang, School of Aerospace Medicine, Fourth Military Medical University, Xi’an, China

When? 16 June 2022 at 3:00 am CEST | 9:00 am CST Asia | 9:00 pm EDT (15 June)

Register now for free!

Interested in contributing to the topic? You can find the Special Issue(s) linked to this topic and open for submission by clicking here.

https://antioxidants-2.sciforum.net

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