| Literature DB >> 29453741 |
Samuel G Impey1, Mark A Hearris1, Kelly M Hammond1, Jonathan D Bartlett2, Julien Louis1, Graeme L Close1, James P Morton3.
Abstract
Deliberately training with reduced carbohydrate (CHO) availability to enhance endurance-training-induced metabolic adaptations of skeletal muscle (i.e. the 'train low, compete high' paradigm) is a hot topic within sport nutrition. Train-low studies involve periodically training (e.g., 30-50% of training sessions) with reduced CHO availability, where train-low models include twice per day training, fasted training, post-exercise CHO restriction and 'sleep low, train low'. When compared with high CHO availability, data suggest that augmented cell signalling (73% of 11 studies), gene expression (75% of 12 studies) and training-induced increases in oxidative enzyme activity/protein content (78% of 9 studies) associated with 'train low' are especially apparent when training sessions are commenced within a specific range of muscle glycogen concentrations. Nonetheless, such muscle adaptations do not always translate to improved exercise performance (e.g. 37 and 63% of 11 studies show improvements or no change, respectively). Herein, we present our rationale for the glycogen threshold hypothesis, a window of muscle glycogen concentrations that simultaneously permits completion of required training workloads and activation of the molecular machinery regulating training adaptations. We also present the 'fuel for the work required' paradigm (representative of an amalgamation of train-low models) whereby CHO availability is adjusted in accordance with the demands of the upcoming training session(s). In order to strategically implement train-low sessions, our challenge now is to quantify the glycogen cost of habitual training sessions (so as to inform the attainment of any potential threshold) and ensure absolute training intensity is not compromised, while also creating a metabolic milieu conducive to facilitating the endurance phenotype.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29453741 PMCID: PMC5889771 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-018-0867-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1Schematic overview of the potential exercise-nutrient-sensitive cell signalling pathways regulating the enhanced mitochondrial adaptations associated with training with low CHO availability. (1) Reduced muscle glycogen enhances both AMPK and p38MAPK phosphorylation that results in (2) activation and translocation of PGC-1α and p53 to the mitochondria and nucleus. (3) Upon entry into the nucleus, PGC-1α co-activates additional transcription factors (i.e. NRF1/2) to increase the expression of COX subunits and Tfam, as well as autoregulating its own expression. In the mitochondria, PGC-1α co-activates Tfam to coordinate regulation of mtDNA, and induces expression of key mitochondrial proteins of the electron transport chain, e.g. COX subunits. Similar to PGC-1α, p53 also translocates to the mitochondria to modulate Tfam activity and mtDNA expression, and to the nucleus where it functions to increase expression of proteins involved in mitochondrial fission and fusion (DRP-1 and MFN-2) and electron transport chain proteins. (4) Exercising in conditions of reduced CHO availability increases adipose tissue and intramuscular lipolysis via increased circulating adrenaline concentrations. (5) The resulting elevation in FFA activates the nuclear transcription factor, PPARδ, to increase expression of proteins involved in lipid metabolism, such as CPT1, PDK4, CD36 and HSL. (6) However, consuming pre-exercise meals rich in CHO and/or CHO during exercise can downregulate lipolysis (thereby negating FFA-mediated signalling), as well as reducing both AMPK and p38MAPK activity, thus having negative implications for downstream regulators. (7) High-fat feeding can also modulate PPARδ signalling and upregulate genes with regulatory roles in lipid metabolism (and downregulate CHO metabolism), although high-fat diets may also reduce muscle protein synthesis via impaired mTOR-p70S6K signalling, despite feeding leucine-rich protein. 4EBP1 eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1, AMPK AMP-activated protein kinase, CHO carbohydrate, CD36 cluster of differentiation 36, COX cytochrome c oxidase, CPT1 carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1, Drp1 dynamin-related protein 1, FA fatty acid, FABP fatty acid binding protein, GLU glucose, GLUT4 glucose transporter type 4, HSL hormone-sensitive lipase, IMTG intramuscular triglycerides, LAT1 large neutral amino acid transporter, LEU leucine, Mfn2 mitofusion-2, mTORC1 mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, p38MAPK p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, p53 tumor protein 53, p70S6K ribosomal protein S6 kinase, PDK4 pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4, PGC-1α peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-α, PPARδ peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, Tfam mitochondrial transcription factor A
Overview of the methodological details and study outcomes of acute and chronic train-low studies according to the relevant train-low paradigm
| Reference | Subjects | Duration | Exercise protocol and glycogen status (mmol/kg dw) | Skeletal muscle adaptations | Exercise performance outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Twice per day model | |||||
| Hansen et al. [ | 7 Untrained men | 10 weeks | Knee extensor exercise. One leg trained 50% of sessions with low glycogen (LOW), while the other trained all sessions with high glycogen (HIGH). Second session glycogen in LOW—pre: 200, post: 100 mmol/kg dw, respectively | Greater increase in CS activity in the LOW condition | Improved TTE for knee extensor exercise |
| Yeo et al. [ | 14 trained male cyclists/triathletes | 3 weeks | 100 min steady-state cycling (63% PPO) followed by 8 × 5-min intervals at maximal pace either 2 h (LOW) or 24 h (HIGH) later. Pre-interval exercise glycogen—LOW: 256, HIGH: 390. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 124, HIGH: 229 | Increased CS and β-HAD activity in the LOW condition only | Similar improvements (10%) in 60-min TT for both groups |
| Morton et al. [ | 23 active men | 6 weeks | 6 × 3-min running (90% VO2max). NORM trained once per day, while LOW + PLA and LOW + GLU trained twice per day (every other day). LOW + GLU ingested CHO before and during every second training session. Pre exercise glycogen—LOW: 232 and 253, HIGH: 412 and 387 in the gastrocnemius and vastus lateralis, respectively. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 107 and 176, HIGH: 240 and 262 in the gastrocnemius and vastus lateralis, respectively | Greater increase in SDH activity in LOW + PLA compared with LOW + GLU and NORM | Similar improvements in VO2max and YoYoIR2 for all groups |
| Yeo et al. [ | 12 trained male cyclists/triathletes | Acute exercise | 100-min steady-state cycling (63% PPO) followed by 8 × 5-min intervals at maximal pace either 2 h (LOW) or 24 h (HIGH) later. Pre-interval exercise glycogen—LOW: 256, HIGH: 390. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 124, HIGH: 229 | Greater phosphorylation of AMPKThr172 in LOW | NA |
| Hulston et al. [ | 14 trained male cyclists | 3 weeks | 90-min cycling at 70% VO2max followed by (2 h apart) HIT (8 × 5 min) in the LOW group. The HIGH group performed alternate days of either steady state or HIT cycling. Acute glycogen status not measured | β-HAD protein content increased in LOW only | Similar improvements in 60-min TT for both groups |
| Cochran et al. [ | 10 Active men | Acute exercise | HIT cycling (5 × 4-min at 90–95% heart rate reserve) twice per day (separated by 3 h). One group consumed CHO (2.3 g.kg) between sessions (HIGH), whereas the other group restricted CHO intake (LOW). Pre-pm exercise glycogen—LOW: 256, HIGH: 390. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 124, HIGH: 229 | Greater phosphorylation of p38MAPK in LOW following pm exercise | NA |
| Cochran et al. [ | 18 Active men | 2 weeks | HIT cycling (5 × 4 min at 60% PPO) twice per day (separated by 3 h). One group consumed CHO (2.3 g kg) between sessions (HIGH), whereas the other group restricted CHO intake (LOW). Acute glycogen status not measured | Similar increase in maximal CS activity and protein content of both CS and COXIV | Greater improvement in 250-kJ TT performance in the LOW group |
| Fasted training model | |||||
| Akerstrom et al. [ | 9 Active men | Acute exercise | 2 h one-legged knee extensor exercise (60% | Reduced AMPKα2 activity in FED | NA |
| Lee-Young et al. [ | 9 Active men | Acute exercise | 120-min cycling (65% VO2peak) exercise in either a fasted (FAST) or fed (exogenous CHO during; FED) state. Pre-exercise glycogen: 500 mmol/kg dw in both groups. Post-exercise glycogen: 150 and 100 in the FED and FAST states, respectively | Similar increases in AMPKα2 activity and AMPKα2Thr172 and ACC-βSer222 phosphorylation | NA |
| De Bock et al. [ | 20 Active men | 6 weeks | 1–2 h cycling (75% VO2peak). One group trained in the fasted state (FAST), with the other consuming CHO before and during exercise (FED). Acute glycogen status not measured | FABP increased in the FAST condition only | NA |
| Nybo et al. [ | 15 untrained men | 8 weeks | 3–6 min of high-intensity intervals (70–85% VO2max). Subjects received either CHO or PLA during exercise. Acute glycogen status not measured | Greater increases in β-HAD activity and basal muscle glycogen content in the PLA group only | Similar improvements in peak power, VO2max and 15-min TT performance |
| Van Proeyen et al. [ | 20 active men | 6 weeks | 1–1.5 h cycling (70% VO2max). One group trained in the fasted state (FAST), with the other consuming CHO before and during exercise (FED). Acute glycogen status not measured | CS and β-HAD maximal activity increased in the FAST condition only | Similar improvements in 1-h TT performance in both groups |
| Sleep-low model | |||||
| Pilegaard et al. [ | Study A: 6 active men | Acute exercise | Study A: 1-legged glycogen-depleting exercise followed by 2-legged cycling (2 h at 45% VO2max) on the subsequent day. Pre-exercise glycogen—LOW: 337, HIGH: 609. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 306, HIGH: 423 | Study A: Enhanced gene expression of PDK4, LPL and HKII at rest in LOW only | NA |
| Wojtaszewski et al. [ | 8 Trained men | Acute exercise | 60-min cycling at 70% VO2peak with either LOW or HIGH muscle glycogen (from exercise/diet manipulation the previous day). Pre-exercise glycogen—LOW: 163, HIGH: 909. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 150, HIGH: 400 | Increased AMPKα2 activity in LOW only | NA |
| Chan et al. [ | 8 active men | Acute exercise | 60-min cycling (70% VO2peak) with either HIGH or LOW glycogen (achieved by exercise/diet manipulation the previous evening). Pre-exercise glycogen—LOW: 163, HIGH: 375. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 17, HIGH: 102 | Greater phosphorylation of p38MAPK in LOW | NA |
| Steinberg et al. [ | 7 active men | Acute exercise | 60-min cycling at 70% VO2max with either LOW or NORM muscle glycogen. Pre-exercise glycoge—LOW: 150, HIGH: 390. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 17, HIGH: 111 | Greater AMPKα2 activity, phosphorylation of ACCSer221 and nuclear translocation of AMPKα2 in LOW only | NA |
| Bartlett et al. [ | 8 active men | Acute exercise | HIT running (6 × 3 min at 90% VO2max). The LOW group performed glycogen-depleting cycling the night before and restricted CHO overnight. The HIGH group consumed a high-CHO breakfast and CHO during exercise. Pre-exercise glycogen – LOW: 100, HIGH: 500. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 80, HIGH: 300 | Phosphorylation of ACCSer79 and p53Ser15 in LOW only | NA |
| Psilander et al. [ | 10 trained male cyclists | Acute exercise | 6 × 10-min cycling (64% VO2max) with either HIGH or LOW glycogen (achieved by exercise/diet manipulation 14 h previously). Pre-exercise glycogen—LOW: 166, HIGH: 478. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 130, HIGH: 477 | Enhanced gene expression of PGC-1α in LOW | NA |
| Lane et al. [ | 7 trained male cyclists | Acute exercise | Evening bout of high-intensity cycling (8 × 5 min at 82.5% PPO) followed by 120-min steady-state cycling (50% PPO) the subsequent morning. The LOW group restricted CHO overnight, whereas the HIGH group consumed a high-CHO diet (4 g.kg BM). Pre-exercise glycogen—LOW: 349, HIGH: 459. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 266, HIGH: 338 | Greater phosphorylation of ACCSer79 post-AM exercise in LOW | NA |
| Marquet et al. [ | 21 male triathletes | 3 weeks | HIT (8 × 5 min cycling at 85% MAP or 6 × 5-min running at individual 10-km intensity) in the evening followed by LIT (60-min cycling at 65% MAP) the subsequent morning. One group consumed CHO between training sessions (HIGH), whereas the other group restricted CHO intake (LOW). Acute glycogen status not measured | NA | Improved 10-km running TT performance and improved TTE cycling (150% peak aerobic power) in the LOW group only |
| Marquet et al. [ | 11 trained male cyclists | 1 week | HIT (8 × 5-min cycling at 85% MAP) in the evening followed by LIT (60-min cycling at 65% MAP) the subsequent morning. One group consumed CHO between training sessions (HIGH), whereas the other group restricted CHO intake (LOW). Acute glycogen status not measured | NA | Improved 20-km cycling TT performance in the LOW group only |
| Recover-low model | |||||
| Pilegaard et al. [ | 9 active men | Acute exercise | 75-min cycling (75% VO2max) followed by 24 h recovery with either HIGH or LOW CHO diet. Glycogen was restored to 576 and 348 with HIGH and LOW CHO diets, respectively, at 24 h | Gene expression of PDK4, UCP3, LPL and CPT1 remained elevated for 8–24 h with CHO restriction post-exercise | NA |
| Jensen et al. [ | 15 male triathletes | Acute exercise | 4-h cycling (56% VO2max) followed by 4 h recovery feeding with either HIGH (1 g.kg.h) or LOW (water only) CHO. Post-exercise glycogen—LOW: 234, HIGH: 245. 4-h glycogen—LOW: 264, HIGH: 444 | Similar gene expression of PGC-1α, Tfam, NRF-1, COXIV, PDK4, LPL, PPAR, UCP3 and GLUT4 in both groups | NA |
| High-fat feeding | |||||
| Hammond et al. [ | 10 active men | Acute exercise | High-intensity running (8 × 5 min at 85% VO2peak) followed by steady-state running (60 min at 70% VO2peak) 3.5 h later. Steady-state running was either commenced with high or low (but high fat) CHO availability. Muscle glycogen was similar in both groups (200 mmol/kg dw) post-steady-state running | p70S6K activity was suppressed with high-fat feeding | NA |
| Periodized model | |||||
| Impey et al. [ | 11 amateur male cyclists | Acute exercise | Based on the principle of ‘fuel for the work required’. 4 × 30 s HIT cycling (150% PPO) and 45 min steady-state cycling (50% PPO) followed by 1 min efforts (80% PPO) until exhaustion with either HIGH or LOW glycogen (by previous exercise/diet manipulation for 36 h previously). The HIGH group consumed CHO before, during and after exercise, whereas the LOW group consumed leucine-enriched protein | 36 h of prior CHO restriction enhanced p53, SIRT1 and Tfam gene expression. CHO restriction before and during exercise induced work-efficient AMPK signalling. Post-exercise CHO restriction and keeping glycogen < 100 mmol/kg dw reduced p70S6K activity | Exercise capacity (1-min efforts at 80% PPO) enhanced in HIGH trial (158 vs. 100 min) |
| Burke et al. [ | 22 international male race walkers | 3 weeks | 3 weeks of intensified training (race walking, resistance training, cross training). Athletes consumed three different diets across the training period: (a) high CHO; (b) LCHF; (c) periodized CHO intake with periods of low CHO training. Acute glycogen status not measured | NA | Similar improvements in VO2peak between all groups |
| Gejl et al. [ | 26 elite male endurance athletes | 4 weeks | 4 weeks of intensified training. Athletes either performed all sessions with high CHO availability or followed a periodized model, performing three sessions per week with reduced CHO availability. Glycogen content was 400 mmol/kg dw following LOW carbohydrate availability training session | Similar increase in maximal CS activity | Similar improvement in VO2max and 30-min TT performance between groups |
Where possible, muscle glycogen status of the relevant experimental trials is also cited
β-HAD 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase, ACC acetyl-CoA carboxylase, AMPK AMP-activated protein kinase, BM Body Mass, CHO carbohydrate, CD36 cluster of differentiation 36, CPT1 carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1, CS citrate synthase, COX cytochrome c oxidase, ERRα estrogen-related receptor α, FABP3 fatty acid binding protein, GLU glucose, GLUT4 glucose tr ansporter type 4, HIT high-intensity training, HKII hexokinase II, IL interleukin, LCHF low-carbohydrate, high-fat, LIT low intensity training, LPL lipoprotein lipase, MAP maximal aerobic power, NA not available, NORM normal, NRF-1 nuclear respiratory factor 1, p38MAPK p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, p53 tumor protein 53, p70S6K ribosomal protein S6 kinase, PDK4 pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4, PGC-1α peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-α, PLA placebo, PM post meridian, PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, PPO peak power output, SIRT1 NAD-dependent deacetylase sirtuin-1, SDH succinate dehydrogenase, Tfam transcription factor A, TT time trial, TTE time to exhaustion, UCP3 uncoupling protein 3, VO maximum rate of oxygen consumption, VO peak rate of oxygen consumption, W Watt maximum, YoYoIR2 Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test 2
Summary of key outcomes from train-low studies as categorized under the measures of cell signalling, gene expression, enzymatic changes and performance outcomes. Studies are presented according to those demonstrating positive changes, no change or negative changes
| Positive | No/equivalent change | Negative | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muscle ( | |||
| Signalling ( | 73% ( | 27% ( | 0% |
| Gene expression ( | 75% ( | 25% ( | 0% |
| Enzyme activity/protein content ( | 78% ( | 22% ( | 0% |
| Physiological responses | |||
| Lipid oxidation ( | 47% ( | 53% ( | 0% |
| Efficiency/economy ( | 50% ( | 50% ( | |
| Performance | |||
| Exercise performance changes ( | 37% ( | 63% ( | 0% |
| Impaired training intensity ( | 0% | 0% | 100% ( |
Fig. 2Overview of studies supporting the glycogen threshold hypothesis. Studies are categorized into those examining a cell signalling, b gene expression and c muscle contractile capacity and post-exercise signalling. In a and b, the green bars represent the trial within the specific study that has been completed with high muscle glycogen, and the red bars represent the trial completed with low muscle glycogen. The length of the bar in both instances corresponds to the pre- and post-exercise muscle glycogen concentration. Additionally, in studies from the authors’ laboratory (Bartlett et al. [38] and Impey et al. [48]), black and white circles represent individual subjects’ pre- and post-exercise muscle glycogen concentrations, respectively. In c, a variety of CHO manipulation protocols have been adopted to examine the effect of high (green bars) and low (red bars) muscle glycogen concentration on contractile properties and post-exercise cell signalling. The shaded area represents a potential muscle glycogen threshold in which exercise should be commenced (albeit specific to the training status of the participants studied in these investigations). AMPK AMP-activated protein kinase, ACC acetyl-CoA carboxylase, Ca calcium, COX cytochrome c oxidase, p38MAPK p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, p70S6K ribosomal protein S6 kinase, PDK4 pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4, PGC-1α peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-α, Tfam mitochondrial transcription factor A
Theoretical overview of the ‘fuel for the work required’ model
The model is presented for an elite endurance athlete (e.g. road cyclist) who trains once per day on 4 consecutive days where each session commences at 10:00 am each day. In this example, the athlete has four main feeding points and the CHO content of each timepoint is colour coded according to a red, amber or green (RAG) rating that represents low, medium and high CHO intake. Note that we have not prescribed specific CHO quantities and deliberately chose a RAG rating so as to highlight the necessity for flexibility in relation to athlete history, training status and specific training goals, etc. Rather, the model is simply presented to illustrate how train-low paradigms can be amalgamated to adjust CHO availability day-by-day and meal-by-meal according to the demands of the specific training session across the 4-day training block. In this example, high CHO intake is advised before, during and after the training session on day 1 (e.g. ‘train high’), but reduced in the evening meal to facilitate sleep low and train low for a lower-intensity session on day 2 (i.e. likely commenced with reduced muscle glycogen and withholding or reducing CHO content of the pre-training meal). Following completion of the second training session, high CHO availability is prescribed for the remainder of day 2 so as to promote glycogen storage in preparation for a higher absolute workload and intensity on day 3. Given that day 4 is a designated recovery day of much lower duration and intensity, CHO intake is then reduced in the evening of day 3 and breakfast of day 4, but is then increased throughout the remainder of day 4 in order to prepare for another 4-day training block. The model should be adjusted according to the number of feeding points and training sessions that are to be undertaken on each day, e.g. a marathon runner [7] would have a different CHO periodization model than a cyclist. Careful day-to-day periodization in a meal-by-meal manner (as opposed to chronic periods of CHO restriction or CHO feeding) is likely to maintain metabolic flexibility and still allow the completion of high-intensity and prolonged duration workloads on heavy training days, e.g. interval-type sessions undertaken above lactate threshold. Intuitively, ‘train low’ may be best left to those training sessions that are not CHO-dependent and where the intensity and duration is not likely to be compromised by reduced CHO availability (e.g. steady-state-type training sessions performed at intensities below the lactate threshold). Additionally, the model may also provide a framework to aid body mass loss given that train-low sessions on lower-intensity training days may allow for the creation of energy deficits without negating training intensity
CHO carbohydrate
Fig. 3Muscle glycogen utilization according to studies incorporating varied exercise intensity, duration, and pre-exercise muscle glycogen concentration. Such data illustrate how the pattern of glycogen use can vary (according to the interactive effects of the aforementioned parameters) and how this should be considered in relation to the proposed glycogen threshold (shaded area). Data represent a sampling from studies compiled from cycling exercise protocols only and represent glycogen use in the vastus lateralis muscle
| Periodically completing endurance training sessions (e.g. 30–50% of training sessions) with reduced carbohydrate (CHO) availability modulates the activation of acute cell signalling pathways (73% of 11 studies), promotes training-induced oxidative adaptations of skeletal muscle (78% of 9 studies) and, in some instances, improves exercise performance (although only 37% of 11 studies demonstrated performance improvements). |
| We propose the presence of a muscle glycogen threshold whereby exceeding a critical absolute level of glycogen depletion during training is especially potent in modulating the activation of acute and chronic skeletal muscle adaptations associated with ‘train low’. |
| Future research should attempt to quantify the glycogen and CHO cost of endurance athletes’ typical training sessions so as to increase our understanding of the exercise conditions that may elicit the proposed glycogen threshold and thereby inform practical application of ‘fuel for the work required’ paradigm. |