Literature DB >> 23765346

Nutritional strategies to modulate the adaptive response to endurance training.

John A Hawley1.   

Abstract

In recent years, advances in molecular biology have allowed scientists to elucidate how endurance exercise training stimulates skeletal muscle remodeling (i.e. promotes mitochondrial biogenesis). A growing field of interest directly arising from our understanding of the molecular bases of training adaptation is how nutrient availability can alter the regulation of many contraction-induced events in muscle in response to endurance exercise. Acutely manipulating substrate availability can exert profound effects on muscle energy stores and patterns of fuel metabolism during exercise, as well as many processes activating gene expression and cell signaling. Accordingly, such interventions when repeated over weeks and months have the potential to modulate numerous adaptive processes in skeletal muscle that ultimately drive the phenotype-specific characteristics observed in highly trained athletes. In this review, the molecular and cellular events that occur in skeletal muscle during and after endurance exercise are discussed and evidence provided to demonstrate that nutrient availability plays an important role in modulating many of the adaptive responses to training. Emphasis is on human studies that have determined the regulatory role of muscle glycogen availability on cell metabolism, endurance training capacity and performance.
Copyright © 2013 Nestec Ltd., Vevey/S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23765346     DOI: 10.1159/000345813

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nestle Nutr Inst Workshop Ser        ISSN: 1664-2147


  3 in total

1.  Sodium bicarbonate ingestion augments the increase in PGC-1α mRNA expression during recovery from intense interval exercise in human skeletal muscle.

Authors:  Michael E Percival; Brian J Martin; Jenna B Gillen; Lauren E Skelly; Martin J MacInnis; Alex E Green; Mark A Tarnopolsky; Martin J Gibala
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2015-09-17

2.  Three weeks of a home-based "sleep low-train low" intervention improves functional threshold power in trained cyclists: A feasibility study.

Authors:  Samuel Bennett; Eve Tiollier; Franck Brocherie; Daniel J Owens; James P Morton; Julien Louis
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-02       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 3.  Genetics of long-distance runners and road cyclists-A systematic review with meta-analysis.

Authors:  Magdalena Johanna Konopka; Jorn Carlos Maria Leonardus van den Bunder; Gerard Rietjens; Billy Sperlich; Maurice Petrus Zeegers
Journal:  Scand J Med Sci Sports       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 4.645

  3 in total

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