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Chemistry Department, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-5698
Received 25 July 1995; accepted in final form 24 June 1996.
Gunderson, Hans, Nadja Wehmeyer, Diane Burnett, John Nauman,
Cynthia Hartzell, and Scott Savage. Exercise and exhaustion effects on glycogen synthesis pathways. J. Appl.
Physiol. 81(5): 2020-2026, 1996.
Female
Sprague-Dawley rats were infused with [1-13C]glucose to
measure the effect of endurance training and the effect of various
metabolic conditions on pathways of hepatic glycogen synthesis. Four
metabolic states [sedentary (S), trained (T), sedentary exhausted
(SE), and trained exhausted (TE)] were studied. T and TE rats
were trained on a motor-driven treadmill (30 m/min, 15% grade, 1.0 h/day, 5 days/wk) for 8-10 wk. After a 24-h fast, SE and TE rats
were run to exhaustion (sedentary average = 78 min, trained average = 155 min) at a training pace and immediately infused with labeled
glucose for 2 h. S and T rats were infused after a 24-h fast. After
infusion, tissues were removed and glycogen was isolated and hydrolyzed
to glucose. The glucose was measured for distribution of
13C by using nuclear magnetic
resonance. Glycogen was synthesized predominantly by the indirect
pathway for all metabolic states, indicating that infused glucose was
first metabolized primarily in the peripheral tissue. The
direct-pathway utilization was greater in rested S than in rested T
animals (30 vs. 14%); however, for exhausted animals, the trained use
of the direct pathway was greater (22 vs. 9%). Both TE and rested T
animals utilize the indirect pathway a comparable amount. Sedentary
animals, on the other hand, dramatically decreased utilization of the
direct pathway, with exhaustive exercise changing from 30 to 9%. The
results indicate that endurance training modifies glucose utilization
during glycogen synthesis after fasting and exhaustive exercise.
endurance training; carbon-13-nuclear magnetic resonance; glucose utilization; glycogenesis; glycolysis; gluconeogenesis
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