Graded reductions in pre-exercise glycogen concentration do not augment exercise-induced nuclear AMPK and PGC-1a protein content in human muscle

New Findings What is the central question of this study? What is the absolute level of pre-exercise glycogen concentration required to augment the exercise-induced signalling response regulating mitochondrial biogenesis? What is the main finding and its importance? Commencing high-intensity endurance exercise with reduced pre-exercise muscle glycogen concentrations confers no additional benefit to the early signalling responses that regulate mitochondrial biogenesis. Abstract We examined the effects of graded muscle glycogen on the subcellular location of AMPK and PGC-1a protein content and mRNA expression of genes associated with the regulation of mitochondrial biogenesis and substrate utilisation in human skeletal muscle. In a repeated measures design, eight trained male cyclists completed acute high-intensity interval (HIT) cycling (8 × 5 min at 80% peak power output) with graded concentrations of pre-exercise muscle glycogen. Following initial glycogen depleting exercise, subjects ingested 2 g kg-1 (L-CHO), 6 g kg-1 (M-CHO) or 14 g kg-1 (H-CHO) of carbohydrate during a 36 h period, such that exercise was commenced with graded (P < 0.05) muscle glycogen concentrations (H-CHO; 531 ± 83, M-CHO; 332 ± 88, L-CHO; 208 ± 79 mmol·kg-1 dw). Exercise depleted muscle glycogen to < 300 mmol·kg-1 dw in all trials (H-CHO; 270 ± 88, M-CHO; 173 ± 74, L-CHO; 100 ± 42 mmol·kg-1 dw) and induced comparable increases in nuclear AMPK protein content (~2 fold) and PGC-1a (~5 fold), p53 (~1.5 fold) and CPT-1 (~2 fold) mRNA between trials (all P < 0.05). The magnitude of increase in PGC-1a mRNA was also positively correlated with post-exercise glycogen concentration (P < 0.05). In contrast, exercise nor carbohydrate availability affected the subcellular location of PGC-1a protein or PPAR, SCO2, SIRT1, DRP1, MFN2 or CD36 mRNA. Using a sleep-low, train-low model with a high-intensity endurance exercise stimulus, we conclude that pre-exercise muscle glycogen does not modulate skeletal muscle cell signalling.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences endurance sports
Tagging:Glykogen
Published in:Experimental Physiology
Language:English
Published: 2020
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1113/EP088866
Volume:105
Issue:11
Pages:1882-1894
Document types:article
Level:advanced