Vol. 94, Issue 3, 1145-1152, March 2003
Metabolic determinants of the onset of acidosis in exercising
human muscle: a 31P-MRS study
M.
Roussel1,
J.
P.
Mattei1,2,
Y.
Le Fur1,
B.
Ghattas3,
P. J.
Cozzone1, and
D.
Bendahan1
1 Centre de Résonance Magnétique
Biologique et Médicale, Unité Mixte de Recherche Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique 6612, and Faculté de
Médecine de Marseille, 2 Service de Rhumatologie,
Hôpital de La Conception, 13005 Marseille; and
3 Département de Statistiques, Faculté
des Sciences de Luminy, 13288 Marseille cedex 09, France
Onset of intracellular
acidosis during muscular exercise has been generally attributed to
activation or hyperactivation of nonoxidative ATP production but has
not been analyzed quantitatively in terms of H+ balance,
i.e., production and removal mechanisms. To address this issue, we have
analyzed the relation of intracellular acidosis to H+
balance during exercise bouts in seven healthy subjects. Each subject
performed a 6-min ramp rhythmic exercise (finger flexions) at low
frequency (LF, 0.47 Hz), leading to slight acidosis, and at high
frequency (HF, 0.85 Hz), inducing a larger acidosis. Metabolic changes
were recorded using 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Onset of intracellular acidosis was statistically identified after 3 and 4 min of exercise for HF and LF protocols, respectively. A detailed
investigation of H+ balance indicated that, for both
protocols, nonoxidative ATP production preceded a change in pH. For HF
and LF protocols, H+ consumption through the creatine
kinase equilibrium was constant in the face of increasing
H+ generation and efflux. For both protocols, changes in pH
were not recorded as long as sources and sinks for H+
approximately balanced. In contrast, a significant acidosis occurred after 4 min of LF exercise and 3 min of HF exercise, whereas the rise
in H+ generation exceeded the rise in H+ efflux
at a nearly constant H+ uptake associated with
phosphocreatine breakdown. We have clearly demonstrated that
intracellular acidosis in exercising muscle does not occur exclusively
as a result of nonoxidative ATP production but, rather, reflects
changes in overall H+ balance.
human skeletal muscle; exercise intensity; anaerobic metabolic
threshold; pH; phosphorus-31-magnetic resonance spectroscopy