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Exercise Physiology and Metabolism Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
-Blockade results in
rapid glucose clearance and premature fatigue during exercise. To
investigate the cause of this increased glucose clearance, we studied
the acute effects of propranolol on insulin-stimulated muscle glucose
uptake during contraction in the presence of epinephrine with an
isolated rat muscle preparation. Glucose uptake increased in both fast-
(epitrochlearis) and slow-twitch (soleus) muscle during insulin or
contraction stimulation. In the presence of 24 nM epinephrine, glucose
uptake during contraction was completely suppressed when insulin was
present. This suppression of glucose uptake by epinephrine was
accompanied by a decrease in insulin receptor substrate
(IRS)-1-phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI3)-kinase activity. Propranolol had
no direct effect on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during
contraction. However, epinephrine was ineffective in attenuating
insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during contraction in the presence of
propranolol. This ineffectiveness of epinephrine to suppress
insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during contraction occurred in
conjunction with its inability to completely suppress IRS-1-PI3-kinase
activity. Results of this study indicate that the effectiveness of
epinephrine to inhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during
contraction is severely diminished in muscle exposed to propranolol.
Thus the increase in glucose clearance and premature fatigue associated
with
-blockade could result from the inability of epinephrine to
attenuate insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake.
glucose 6-phosphate; glycogen; phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; insulin receptor substrate-1;
-adrenergic receptors
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