Literature DB >> 10084587

Tissue composition affects measures of postabsorptive human skeletal muscle metabolism: comparison across genders.

L A Jahn1, E J Barrett, M L Genco, L Wei, T A Spraggins, D A Fryburg.   

Abstract

Despite clear anthropomorphic differences, gender differences in human skeletal muscle protein and carbohydrate metabolism have not been carefully examined. We compared postabsorptive forearm glucose, oxygen, and lactate balances and forearm protein kinetics between 40 male and 36 female subjects. Forearm composition was measured in a subset of 17 subjects (8 males and 9 females) using multislice magnetic resonance imaging. Oxygen uptake, net phenylalanine release, and estimated rates of forearm protein synthesis and degradation were greater in male than in female subjects when expressed as the rate per 100 mL forearm volume (P < 0.05). In males, however, muscle accounted for 58% of forearm volume, compared with 46% in females (P < 0.001). When phenylalanine balance, protein degradation and synthesis, and glucose and oxygen uptake were expressed per 100 mL forearm muscle, there were no significant differences across gender. Likewise, the extraction fractions for oxygen, glucose, phenylalanine, and labeled phenylalanine were comparable in males and females. We conclude that cross-gender comparisons of metabolic variables must accommodate differences in tissue composition. These data indicate that in the postabsorptive state, skeletal muscle metabolism of glucose, protein, and oxygen do not differ by gender in healthy young humans.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10084587     DOI: 10.1210/jcem.84.3.5522

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0021-972X            Impact factor:   5.958


  18 in total

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7.  Higher muscle protein synthesis in women than men across the lifespan, and failure of androgen administration to amend age-related decrements.

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8.  No major sex differences in muscle protein synthesis rates in the postabsorptive state and during hyperinsulinemia-hyperaminoacidemia in middle-aged adults.

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Review 10.  Sexual dimorphism in skeletal muscle protein turnover.

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