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-adrenergic desensitization in human adipose
tissue
1 Laboratory of the Adaptations to Exercise, Purpan University Hospital, 31059 Toulouse Cedex; 3 Laboratory of Medical and Clinical Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, 31073 Toulouse Cedex; 2 Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unité 317, Rangueil University Hospital, 31062 Toulouse Cedex 4, France; and 4 Department of Sports Medicine, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, 100 00 Prague, Czech Republic
This study was designed to assess whether
physiological activation of the sympathetic nervous system induced by
exercise changes adipose tissue responsiveness to catecholamines in
humans. Lipid mobilization in abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue was studied with the use of a microdialysis method in 11 nontrained men
(age: 22.3 ± 1.5 yr; body mass index: 23.0 ± 1.6). Adipose tissue adrenergic sensitivity was explored with norepinephrine, dobutamine (
1-agonist), or terbutaline
(
2-agonist) perfused during 30 min through probes before
and after 60-min exercise (50% of the maximal aerobic power). The
increase in extracellular glycerol concentration during infusion was
significantly lower after the exercise when compared with the increase
observed before the exercise (P < 0.05, P < 0.02, and P < 0.01, respectively, for norepinephrine, dobutamine, and terbutaline). In a control experiment realized without exercise, no difference in
norepinephrine-induced glycerol increase between the two infusions was
observed. To assess the involvement of catecholamines in the blunted
-adrenergic-induced lipolytic response after exercise, adipose
tissue adrenergic sensitivity was explored with two 60-min infusions of
norepinephrine or epinephrine separated by a 60-min interval. With both
catecholamines, the increase in glycerol was significantly lower during
the second infusion (P < 0.05). The findings suggest
that aerobic exercise, which increased adrenergic activity, induces a
desensitization in
1- and
2-adrenergic
lipolytic pathways in human subcutaneous adipose tissue.
lipolysis; catecholamines; dobutamine; terbutaline
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