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1 Exercise Physiology and
Metabolism Laboratory, To examine the effect of
training status on muscle metabolism during exercise, seven
endurance-trained [peak oxygen uptake (
muscle metabolism; glycogen; adenosine 5'-triphosphate supply
and demand; inosine monophosphate
FATIGUE FROM PROLONGED, submaximal exercise occurs
concurrently with muscle glycogen depletion (5, 22) and can be delayed by providing exogenous carbohydrate during exercise (2, 5). There are
several theories attempting to explain the requirement for carbohydrate
in delaying fatigue (6, 11). It has been suggested that as muscle
glycogen stores are progressively compromised during exercise, flux
through glycolysis is reduced, leading to a fall in pyruvate formation
(22) and a reduction in tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates (10,
22), resulting in an impairment in ATP provision. The subsequent
decrease in ATP provision from carbohydrate sources may lead to a
transient increase in ADP concentration, stimulating the myokinase
reaction. This reaction results in the formation of AMP, which is
rapidly deaminated to IMP and ammonia via the activity of AMP deaminase
(27). If this scenario is correct, an increase in the intramuscular
concentration of IMP during prolonged, submaximal exercise may
therefore serve as a marker of impaired ATP synthesis. Although this
sequence of events is probable, it is important to note that an
accumulation of muscle IMP only reflects an imbalance between rates of
ATP synthesis and degradation. Consequently, it is possible that an
increase in IMP content during prolonged exercise may result from an
increased rate of ATP degradation and/or a decreased synthesis rate.
Accordingly, many studies have noted the accumulation of IMP at fatigue
after prolonged exercise in the presence of low intramuscular glycogen stores (1, 19, 20, 22) but not earlier when glycogen stores were
adequate (20, 22). These findings demonstrate therefore that an
imbalance between ATP synthesis and degradation rates occurred at some
point during this type of exercise. Of note, however, these studies
have been conducted in untrained individuals.
Endurance training results in an attenuation in IMP accumulation during
steady-state submaximal exercise in humans (12, 13) and rats (8), a
reduction in phosphocreatine (PCr) degradation (12-14), and an
attenuation in lactate (12-14) and ammonia accumulation (3). These
findings demonstrate that training improves the match between ATP
synthesis and degradation during exercise at submaximal work rates. Few
studies, however, have examined IMP accumulation at fatigue from
prolonged exercise in endurance-trained individuals. It is difficult to
make comparisons between the studies that do exist because of
differences in experimental procedures, training status of the
volunteers, and variable levels of glycogen within the fatigued
muscles. For instance, Sahlin et al. (23) observed no IMP accumulation
in skeletal muscle after prolonged exercise to fatigue in men who they
described as training regularly [maximal oxygen uptake
( The present study was undertaken to directly examine muscle energy
metabolism during submaximal exercise to fatigue in untrained and
endurance-trained individuals. It was hypothesized that IMP accumulation at fatigue would be attenuated in endurance-trained, compared with untrained, men in the presence of similarly low levels of
muscle glycogen.
Subjects. Seven endurance-trained (TR)
and six untrained (UT) males (Table 1),
volunteered to participate in the present study after being fully
informed of the experimental procedures and giving informed consent.
Subjects were designated as TR if they had a peak oxygen consumption
(
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ABSTRACT
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
O2 peak) = 65.8 ± 2.4 ml · kg
1 · min
1]
and six untrained
(
O2 peak = 46.2 ± 1.9 ml · kg
1 · min
1)
men cycled to fatigue at a work rate calculated to require 70%
O2 peak. Time to
exhaustion was 36% longer (P < 0.01) in trained (TR) compared with untrained (UT) men (148 ± 11 vs. 95 ± 8 min). Although intramuscular glycogen content was
reduced (P < 0.05) in both TR and UT
at fatigue, IMP, a marker of a mismatch between ATP supply and demand,
was only elevated (P < 0.01) in UT
muscle at fatigue and was approximately fourfold higher at this point in UT compared with TR. These data demonstrate that fatiguing submaximal exercise was associated with a similar low level of intramuscular glycogen in both TR and UT men, but a mismatch between ATP supply and demand only occurred in UT individuals.
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INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
O2 max) = 3.26-5.24 l/min]. However, postexercise IMP and glycogen
were inversely correlated in this study. Spencer et al. (25) reported
muscle IMP concentrations of endurance-trained individuals to be <0.1
mmol/kg dry wt at rest and to increase to 0.77 mmol/kg at fatigue from
prolonged exercise. It is not clear, however, whether this increase was significant, since the statistical analysis was not conducted. Finally,
Hargreaves et al. (16) observed no increase in IMP concentration at
fatigue in endurance-trained muscle, despite the fact that
intramuscular glycogen stores were low. Although it is difficult to
compare the aforementioned studies, these results suggest that limited
glycogen availability in muscles with a high mitochondrial capacity, as
is typical of endurance-trained individuals, may not necessarily result
in a mismatch between ATP synthesis and degradation.
![]()
METHODS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
O2 peak) >60
ml · kg
1 · min
1
and UT if they had a
O2 peak <50
ml · kg
1 · min
1.
In addition, average weekly training for the TR group consisted of 11 h
of endurance exercise, which included ~175-200 km of cycling. In
contrast, UT were sedentary. This experiment was approved by the Human
Ethics Committees at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and
Victoria University of Technology.
Table 1.
Subject characteristics
O2 peak.
O2 peak was
determined during incremental cycling exercise at 80-90 rpm, to
volitional exhaustion on an electrically braked cycle ergometer (Lode,
Groningen, The Netherlands). During this test, expired air was directed
by a Hans Rudolf valve through a ventilometer into a mixing chamber,
and was analyzed for oxygen and carbon dioxide by gas analyzers that
were calibrated before each test using a commercially prepared gas
mixture (Sensormedics MMC Horizon System; Medical Graphics, St. Paul, MN).
Exercise trial. A work rate was
selected that would elicit ~70%
O2 peak. Each subject
performed the experimental trial on the same cycle ergometer used
during the
O2 peak
test. Subjects were instructed to cycle at the predetermined work rate,
at a pedal frequency of 80-90 rpm until fatigue. Fatigue was
defined as the inability to complete one pedal revolution, since the
work rate on the electrically braked ergometer is fixed and not
influenced by pedal revolution rate. All subjects were given verbal
encouragement to continue cycling from the same investigator. Before
the trial, subjects arrived at the laboratory after an overnight fast,
having refrained from exercise, alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine for 24 h.
Heart rate and pulmonary measurements.
Heart rate (HR) was recorded via telemetry (Sport Tester, Polar,
Finland) at rest, at 5 and 20 min, and at 20-min intervals until
fatigue. Expired pulmonary gases were collected and analyzed, as
described above, at 5 and 30 min and at 30-min intervals until fatigue.
Oxygen uptake (
O2) and
respiratory exchange ratio (RER) were calculated from these
measurements. As the subjects neared fatigue, pulmonary gases were not
collected, as it may have interfered with the performance of the subjects.
Tissue sampling and analysis. Muscle samples were obtained from the vastus lateralis, at rest and immediately after exercise, using the percutaneous needle biopsy technique modified for suction. Muscle samples were frozen in liquid nitrogen 25.7 ± 3.0 s after the cessation of exercise, and the time to freeze was not different (P > 0.05) when comparing TR with UT. Samples were analyzed for PCr, creatine, lactate, ATP, ADP, AMP, IMP, hypoxanthine, and glycogen as described previously (9, 26).
An indwelling catheter was inserted into an antecubital vein, and blood was sampled at rest, at 5 and 20 min, and every 20 min until fatigue. Approximately 2 ml of blood were placed in a tube containing fluoride heparin and were spun, and the plasma was subsequently analyzed for glucose (YSI model 2300; Yellow Spring Instruments). The remainder of the blood was analyzed for plasma lactate and hypoxanthine, as described by Stathis et al. (26).
Statistical analyses. A Students
t-test of independent means was used
to compare the TR and UT subject characteristics,
O2 peak, time to exhaustion (TTE), biopsy freeze time, the changes in IMP, and
the total adenine nucleotide pool (TAN = ATP + ADP + AMP) as a result
of exercise. Muscle and plasma metabolite concentrations were compared
using a two-way ANOVA for repeated measures (Biomedical Data Processing
statistical software). Simple main effects analyses and Newman-Keuls
post hoc tests were used to locate specific differences. Significance
was accepted at the P < 0.05 level.
All values are reported as means ± SE. To maintain a sample size of
seven (TR) and six (UT), appropriate analyses include data points from
the start of exercise until the last common time point for all subjects and then at fatigue.
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RESULTS |
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|
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Performance and pulmonary variables.
TTE was 36% longer (P < 0.01) in TR
compared with UT (Table 2). Mean exercise
O2 was higher
(P < 0.05), and mean RER and HR were
lower (P < 0.05) in TR compared with
UT (Table 2).
|
Muscle metabolite concentrations. The
muscle metabolite concentrations at rest and fatigue are summarized in
Table 3. Although muscle glycogen and PCr
concentrations decreased (P < 0.01)
to similar levels at fatigue in TR and UT, an exercise-induced increase (P < 0.01) in muscle IMP and
hypoxanthine was only observed in UT. In addition, although the IMP
concentrations in TR were 0.05 ± 0.02 and 0.44 ± 0.15 mmol/kg
dry wt at rest and fatigue, respectively, these values were not
significantly different (P = 0.26).
Furthermore, concentrations of muscle IMP and hypoxanthine were higher
(P < 0.05) at fatigue when comparing
UT with TR. The exercise-induced change in TAN tended
(P = 0.06) to be greater in UT
compared with TR (Fig. 1).
|
|
Plasma metabolite concentrations. The
resting concentrations of all the measured plasma metabolites were not
different between TR and UT. Plasma hypoxanthine was greater
(P < 0.01) than rest at 20 and 60 min of exercise and at fatigue in UT, whereas in TR plasma hypoxanthine
was elevated (P < 0.05) only at
fatigue. Furthermore, the concentration of this metabolite was greater (P < 0.05) at fatigue in UT compared
with TR (Fig. 2). Plasma lactate increased
(P < 0.05) during exercise in both
groups. Concentrations of this metabolite were higher in UT at 20 min
(P < 0.01) and at 40 min
(P < 0.05) compared with TR (Fig.
3). Plasma glucose was not different at any
time during exercise between the two groups (Fig. 3). There was a main
effect (P < 0.01) for time for glucose, and it was greater (P < 0.01) than rest at 20 and 40 min. Although the concentration of this
metabolite at fatigue was lower than at 20 min
(P < 0.01) and 40 min
(P < 0.05) of exercise, it was not
different from rest (Fig. 3).
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DISCUSSION |
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The results from the present study demonstrate that prolonged submaximal cycling to fatigue results in reduced intramuscular glycogen stores in both TR and UT men. There was, however, an accumulation of IMP in UT but not TR skeletal muscle at fatigue. Although the TAN pool was not statistically different between TR and UT, the exercise-induced change in TAN tended (P = 0.06) to be greater in UT compared with TR. Furthermore, a t-test performed on the TR data alone indicated that there was no change in TAN when comparing values at rest with those at fatigue. These findings demonstrate that the mismatch between ATP synthesis and degradation that occurs during prolonged exercise in UT muscle is not evident in endurance TR muscle.
The present study is the first to simultaneously compare muscle IMP accumulation in endurance TR and UT individuals during prolonged exercise to fatigue. The findings of this study are consistent with previous research in which an accumulation of IMP in UT muscle has been observed after submaximal fatiguing exercise (1, 19, 20, 22). These authors speculated that IMP accumulates during this type of exercise because of a reduced ATP supply, via oxidative metabolism. Although this is possible, it cannot be excluded that IMP accumulates in UT subjects as a result of an increased ATP demand or a combination of an increased ATP demand and reduced ATP supply. For example, an increase in contracting muscle ATP demand may occur during prolonged submaximal exercise when more type II muscle fibers are recruited to maintain the work rate (24). As previously discussed, it is difficult to interpret the existing literature on the influence of endurance training on muscle IMP accumulation at fatigue. It is interesting to note, however, that Spencer et al. (25) report that the IMP concentration in TR muscle at fatigue from prolonged exercise was eightfold greater than at rest. This value is very similar to the magnitude of change observed for TR in the present study. Furthermore, we found this change not to be different (P = 0.26); in fact, three of the seven TR subjects in the present study had IMP concentrations at fatigue similar to their resting levels.
Hypoxanthine is a degradation product of IMP, and it is able to diffuse across the sarcolemma (27). Plasma hypoxanthine, therefore, may serve as an extracellular marker of IMP accumulation. The marked accumulation of IMP in contracting UT muscle in this study was consistent with the increased plasma hypoxanthine at fatigue (Fig. 2). However, given that the rise in plasma hypoxanthine was significant at 20 min of exercise and continued to accumulate at 60 min and at fatigue, it is likely that IMP accumulated in the contracting UT muscle throughout exercise and may not simply be related to glycogen availability. There was a small increase in plasma hypoxanthine at fatigue in TR men. However, the concentration (~6 µM) was low and provides further evidence to suggest that there was no significant change in the adenine nucleotide pool in contracting TR muscle at fatigue.
The lower IMP concentration observed in TR muscle in the present study extends the findings of previous research, which has observed that exercise of the same relative intensity results in a smaller disturbance in homeostasis in endurance TR compared with UT muscle before fatigue (12-14). Although the attenuated accumulation of IMP observed in endurance TR individuals during nonfatiguing prolonged exercise is most likely due to an enhanced oxidative capacity (8), Green et al. (12) have suggested that a reduction in IMP accumulation may occur independent of improved mitochondrial capacity. It is possible that the reduction in muscle IMP accumulation after endurance training may result from alterations in the neuromuscular recruitment pattern (4). Such an adaptation may lead to an increase in mechanical efficiency, resulting in less metabolic strain and more uniform glycogen utilization in any one group of muscles or muscle fibers. As a consequence, an improved match between ATP synthesis and degradation would be maintained, and no IMP accumulation would occur within the contracting fibers.
It is possible that the degree of metabolic disturbance observed in UT
during exercise was a function of the work rate employed. Green et al.
(13) observed that muscle IMP accumulation was attenuated after 30 min
of submaximal exercise, at a given percentage of
O2 max, after
4 and 8 wk of training. The aerobic capacity of these subjects was
greater after training (15) and, because the work rate was not adjusted
accordingly, it follows that the exercise bouts were performed at a
lower relative work rate at 4 and 8 wk. There was an ample supply of
glycogen both before and after training, so it is possible that the
work rate may have been a factor in IMP accumulation. In the present
study, although UT were working at the same relative
O2 peak as
TR, both RER and HR for the duration of the cycling bout were higher
(Table 2). Furthermore, plasma hypoxanthine (Fig. 2) increased markedly early in exercise in UT when glycogen stores were probably adequate (12), and plasma lactate (Fig. 3) was twofold higher during the first
60 min of exercise in UT compared with TR. It appears from these data
that UT, when exercising at 70%
O2 peak, were unable to
adequately meet the exercise demand via aerobic processes. In contrast,
the data from TR indicate that they appeared to maintain metabolic
control throughout the exercise bout.
In addition to endurance training, other factors may account for at least some of the differences in muscle metabolism observed between the groups in the present study. Differences in muscle fiber-type composition of the subjects may be important. It is well established that endurance TR individuals have a greater proportion of slow-twitch (type I) fibers than the general population (21). Most of the fiber-type composition differences between individuals can probably be attributed to genetic factors (18); however, endurance training is known to cause a small shift in muscle fiber composition toward type I fibers (17). Previous research has shown that glycogen-depleted type I fibers accumulate less IMP during prolonged nonfatiguing exercise compared with glycogen-depleted type II fibers (19). Because endurance TR individuals would be expected to recruit fewer type II fibers at the exercise intensity used in the present study, it is possible that the reduction in muscle IMP content observed in TR compared with UT may, at least partly, be due to this factor.
The present study is unable to clarify whether fatigue in either group resulted from peripheral or central origins. Nevertheless, it is likely that a hypoglycemic-mediated dysfunction of the central nervous system did not occur in either endurance TR or UT men because plasma glucose values did not fall below 4.5 mM in either group (Fig. 3). This finding is consistent with some (25), but not other (2, 5), observations. It is possible, however, that performance may have been effected via changes in other central parameters, such as plasma levels of dopamine and/or prolactin, that occurred independent of plasma glucose concentration. It has been proposed for a number of years (28) that the serotoninergic system may play a crucial role in the central control of fatigue during prolonged exercise. Prolactin has been proposed as a marker of central serotoninergic activity, and increases in plasma prolactin concentration have been observed as exercise intensity increased (7). Aside from the plasma glucose data, the present paper is, unfortunately, unable to add to the central fatigue discussion. Further investigation into the role of the central nervous system during prolonged exercise to fatigue is needed.
In summary, although fatigue during prolonged submaximal exercise was associated with a similar low level of intramuscular glycogen in both TR and UT muscle, IMP accumulated in UT but not TR muscle. Consequently, these data indicate that there was a mismatch between ATP supply and demand during submaximal exercise to fatigue in UT that was not evident in TR muscle.
The present study was able to clearly outline the different muscle metabolic profiles of highly endurance TR and UT groups during submaximal exercise to fatigue. Importantly, the present study is the first to demonstrate, under the same experimental conditions, that UT have an imbalance in skeletal muscle ATP supply and demand at fatigue, but TR do not. Although speculative, our results indicate that the cause of fatigue in UT subjects may be related to muscle metabolic stress; however, this is unlikely to be the case in TR subjects. If this interpretation is correct, it raises the question of what is causing fatigue during submaximal exercise in TR. The findings from the present study also highlight several areas where further research is required. First, our results need to be confirmed using a longitudinal experimental design. Furthermore, the time course for the accumulation of IMP during fatiguing submaximal exercise and how this is affected by endurance training needs to be established. In these types of studies the mechanism(s) causing the accumulation of muscle IMP (i.e., decreased ATP synthesis and/or increased ATP degradation) requires examination. Finally, our knowledge of the influence of training on muscle metabolic stress would benefit from single fiber-type analysis as this would allow a more accurate examination of the link between glycogen depletion and IMP accumulation during fatiguing submaximal exercise.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank the subjects for participating in this study, Dr. Andrew Garnham for medical assistance, and Sue Fabris and Troy Flanagan for technical assistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was funded, in part, by a grant from the Faculty of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and correspondence: M. A. Febbraio, Dept. of Physiology, The Univ. of Melbourne, Parkville, 3052 Victoria, Australia (E-mail: m.febbraio{at}physiology.unimelb.edu.au).
Received 23 November 1998; accepted in final form 21 April 1999.
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