| Literature DB >> 33968972 |
Abstract
After almost a century of misunderstanding, it is time to appreciate that lactate shuttling is an important feature of energy flux and metabolic regulation that involves a complex series of metabolic, neuroendocrine, cardiovascular, and cardiac events in vivo. Cell-cell and intracellular lactate shuttles in the heart and between the heart and other tissues fulfill essential purposes of energy substrate production and distribution as well as cell signaling under fully aerobic conditions. Recognition of lactate shuttling came first in studies of physical exercise where the roles of driver (producer) and recipient (consumer) cells and tissues were obvious. One powerful example of cell-cell lactate shuttling was the exchange of carbohydrate energy in the form of lactate between working limb skeletal muscle and the heart. The exchange of mass represented a conservation of mass that required the integration of neuroendocrine, autoregulatory, and cardiovascular systems. Now, with greater scrutiny and recognition of the effect of the cardiac cycle on myocardial blood flow, there brings an appreciation that metabolic fluxes must accommodate to pressure-flow realities within an organ in which they occur. Therefore, the presence of an intra-cardiac lactate shuttle is posited to explain how cardiac mechanics and metabolism are synchronized. Specifically, interruption of blood flow during the isotonic phase of systole is supported by glycolysis and subsequent return of blood flow during diastole allows for recovery sustained by oxidative metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: exercise; fatty acids; glucose; heart; ketones; lactate; metabolism; muscle
Year: 2021 PMID: 33968972 PMCID: PMC8101701 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.663560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Illustration of the invasive and complicated methods to simultaneously determine cardiac and whole-body energy substrate partitioning in man. Setting for (26, 28, 29, 45–47); G. A. B. personal photo.
Figure 2Illustration of substrate–substrate interactions in cardiac metabolism as determined in a man resting or engaged in easy, 40% VO2max exercise. Results show that the contribution of lactate to cardiac energy need depends on arterial lactate concentration and is significantly greater than that of glucose. Results also show crossover from fatty acid to lactate dependence in heart during exercise. Data from (28).
Figure 3Illustration of how lactatemia affects crossover from lipid- to lactate-based metabolism in cardiac and skeletal muscle. Lactate is the inevitable consequence of glycolysis (63), the minimal muscle L/P being 10 and rising to an L/P >100 when glycolytic flux is high (64). Lactate availability as a myocardial energy source increases during physical exercise because arterial lactate concentration rises (27, 55), but also as the result of increased cardiac work and glycolytic flux during exercise (28, 29) or as the result of pacing (12). As the favored Oxidizable substrate, lactate catabolism results in product inhibition of glucose and FFA oxidation. As the products of glycolysis, lactate and pyruvate provide negative feedback inhibition of glucose disposal (blue dashed lines). Also as the predominant mitochondrial substrate, lactate gives rise to Acetyl-CoA, and in turn Malonyl-CoA. Acetyl-CoA inhibits β-ketothiolase, and hence β-oxidation, while Malonyl-CoA inhibits mitochondrial FFA-derivative uptake via CPT1 (T) (76). Moreover, lactate is the main gluconeogenic precursor raising glucose production and blood (glucose) (red lines). Via GPR81 binding, lactate inhibits lipolysis in WAT (T) depressing circulating (FFA) (77, 78). This model explains the paradoxical presence of lactatemia in high-intensity exercise and insulin-resistant states with limited ability to oxidize fat (green lines). Modified from Hashimoto et al. (79). CPT1, carnitine palmitoyl transporter-1; FFA, free fatty acid; FAT, fatty acid translocator composed of CD36 and FABPc; GLUT, glucose transporter; s, sarcolemmal; m, mitochondrial. Malonyl-CoA formed from exported TCA citrate controlled by the interactions of Malonyl-CoA decarboxylase (MCD) and acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC). MCT, monocarboxylate transporter; MPC, mitochondrial pyruvate transporter; PDH, pyruvate dehydrogenase; WAT, white adipose tissue; T, inhibition. Not shown is fatty acyl-Co (FA-CoA) that will accumulate if FFAs are taken up by myocytes, but blocked from mitochondrial entry by the effect of Malonyl-CoA on CPT1. Accumulated intracellular FA-CoA will give rise to intramyocellular triglyceride (IMTG) and the formulation of LC-FA, DAG, and ceramides via inhibition of PI3 kinase (PI3-k) and reducing GLUT4 translocation; from (1).
Figure 4Illustration of the relationships between whole-body glucose rate of disappearance (RdG) and lactate appearance (RAL) during rest, exercise at 40% VO2max (47), and lactate threshold (55, 91).
Figure 5Illustration of the contributions of glucose and lactate to cardiac metabolism in healthy men studied at rest and during supine leg cycle ergometry at 40% VO2max (see Figure 1) (29). Results are to be compared with those in the same subjects resting and exercising at 40% of VO2max (see Figure 4). Results are also to be compared with those on one subject, the author, but in Figure 2 the role of fatty acids in supplying energy for cardiac metabolism is depicted. Results show that the contribution of lactate to cardiac energy need depends on arterial lactate concentration and is significantly greater than that of glucose . Results in Figure 2 also show crossover from fatty acid to lactate dependence in heart during exercise. Data from (28).