Literature DB >> 16670154

Carbohydrate ingestion does not alter skeletal muscle AMPK signaling during exercise in humans.

Robert S Lee-Young1, Matthew J Palmer, Kelly C Linden, Kieran LePlastrier, Benedict J Canny, Mark Hargreaves, Glenn D Wadley, Bruce E Kemp, Glenn K McConell.   

Abstract

There is evidence that increasing carbohydrate (CHO) availability during exercise by raising preexercise muscle glycogen levels attenuates the activation of AMPKalpha2 during exercise in humans. Similarly, increasing glucose levels decreases AMPKalpha2 activity in rat skeletal muscle in vitro. We examined the effect of CHO ingestion on skeletal muscle AMPK signaling during exercise in nine active male subjects who completed two 120-min bouts of cycling exercise at 65 +/- 1% V(O2 peak). In a randomized, counterbalanced order, subjects ingested either an 8% CHO solution or a placebo solution during exercise. Compared with the placebo trial, CHO ingestion significantly (P < 0.05) increased plasma glucose levels and tracer-determined glucose disappearance. Exercise-induced increases in muscle-calculated free AMP (17.7- vs. 11.8-fold), muscle lactate (3.3- vs. 1.8-fold), and plasma epinephrine were reduced by CHO ingestion. However, the exercise-induced increases in skeletal muscle AMPKalpha2 activity, AMPKalpha2 Thr(172) phosphorylation and acetyl-CoA Ser(222) phosphorylation, were essentially identical in the two trials. These findings indicate that AMPK activation in skeletal muscle during exercise in humans is not sensitive to changes in plasma glucose levels in the normal range. Furthermore, the rise in plasma epinephrine levels in response to exercise was greatly suppressed by CHO ingestion without altering AMPK signaling, raising the possibility that epinephrine does not directly control AMPK activity during muscle contraction under these conditions in vivo.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16670154     DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00023.2006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0193-1849            Impact factor:   4.310


  11 in total

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