Dan Cristian Mănescu · 2026 · International journal of molecular sciences · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Training adaptation involves muscular-metabolic remodeling and personality-linked traits such as motivation, self-regulation, and resilience. This narrative review examines how training load oscillati Show more
Training adaptation involves muscular-metabolic remodeling and personality-linked traits such as motivation, self-regulation, and resilience. This narrative review examines how training load oscillation (TLO)-the deliberate variation in exercise intensity, volume, and substrate availability-may function as a systemic epigenetic stimulus capable of shaping both physiological and psychological adaptation. Fluctuating energetic states reconfigure key energy-sensing pathways (AMPK, mTOR, CaMKII, and SIRT1), thereby potentially influencing DNA methylation, histone acetylation, and microRNA programs linked to PGC-1α and BDNF. This review synthesizes converging evidence suggesting links between these molecular responses and behavioral consistency, cognitive control, and stress tolerance. Building on this literature, a systems model of molecular-behavioral coupling is proposed, in which TLO is hypothesized to entrain phase-shifted AMPK/SIRT1 and mTOR windows, alongside CaMKII intensity pulses and a delayed BDNF crest. The model generates testable predictions-such as amplitude-dependent PGC-1α demethylation, BDNF promoter acetylation, and NR3C1 recalibration under recovery-weighted cycles-and highlights practical implications for timing nutritional, cognitive, and recovery inputs to molecular windows. Understanding TLO as an entrainment signal may help integrate physiology and psychology within a coherent, durable performance strategy. This framework is conceptual in scope and intended to generate testable hypotheses rather than assert definitive mechanisms, providing a structured basis for future empirical investigations integrating molecular, physiological, and behavioral outcomes. Show less