| Literature DB >> 2917928 |
Abstract
To estimate oxidative capacity of noncontracting rat skeletal muscle, the isolated gracilis muscle was perfused at various high flow rates with high-PO2 (88 kPa) saline-albumin solution and simultaneously perifused at either low (6.3 kPa) or high PO2 in a calorimeter at 28 degrees C. Under low-PO2 perifusion, specific O2 consumption and heat production rates (MO2 and E, respectively) were flow-rate dependent. E values were all larger than those obtained on blood-perfused preparations at 28 degrees C. MO2 reached 0.47 mumol.min-1.g muscle-1 and E reached 4 mW/g. Normalized to 36 degrees C by means of activation energies determined from 30 and 36 degrees C measurements on nonperfused gracilis strips, these maxima correspond to three times the largest MO2 measured by other authors in blood-autoperfused gracilis. Increasing perifusion PO2 from 6.3 to 88 kPa sharply decreased MO2. These results confirm that MO2 of blood-perfused skeletal muscles in vitro (and a fortiori in vivo) is kept much below its maximum for a noncontracting organ; they also suggest that this maximum MO2 is not necessarily an effect of unphysiologically high PO2 in the tissue cells.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2917928 DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1989.66.1.253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Physiol (1985) ISSN: 0161-7567