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Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity

Computer simulations using a dynamic model of the skeletal muscle bioenergetic system, involving the P(i)-double-threshold mechanism of muscle fatigue, demonstrate that the training-induced increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max), increase in critical power (CP) and acceleration of primary phase II...

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Autor principal: Korzeniewski, Bernard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10673597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37999207
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13111111
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author Korzeniewski, Bernard
author_facet Korzeniewski, Bernard
author_sort Korzeniewski, Bernard
collection PubMed
description Computer simulations using a dynamic model of the skeletal muscle bioenergetic system, involving the P(i)-double-threshold mechanism of muscle fatigue, demonstrate that the training-induced increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max), increase in critical power (CP) and acceleration of primary phase II of the  [Formula: see text] O(2) on kinetics (decrease in t(0.63)) is caused by elevated OXPHOS activity acting through a decrease in and slowing of the P(i) (inorganic phosphate) rise during the rest-to-work transition. This change leads to attenuation of the reaching by P(i) of Pi(peak), peak P(i) at which exercise is terminated because of fatigue. The delayed (in time and in relation to  [Formula: see text] O(2) increase) P(i) rise for a given power output (PO) in trained muscle causes P(i) to reach Pi(peak) (in very heavy exercise) after a longer time and at a higher  [Formula: see text] O(2); thus, exercise duration is lengthened, and  [Formula: see text] O(2max) is elevated compared to untrained muscle. The diminished P(i) increase during exercise with a given PO can cause P(i) to stabilize at a steady state less than P(ipeak), and exercise can continue potentially ad infinitum (heavy exercise), instead of rising unceasingly and ultimately reaching Pi(peak) and causing exercise termination (very heavy exercise). This outcome means that CP rises, as the given PO is now less than, and not greater than CP. Finally, the diminished P(i) increase (and other metabolite changes) results in, at a given PO (moderate exercise), the steady state of fluxes (including  [Formula: see text] O(2)) and metabolites being reached faster; thus, t(0.63) is shortened. This effect of elevated OXPHOS activity is possibly somewhat diminished by the training-induced decrease in Pi(peak).
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spelling pubmed-106735972023-10-27 Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity Korzeniewski, Bernard Metabolites Article Computer simulations using a dynamic model of the skeletal muscle bioenergetic system, involving the P(i)-double-threshold mechanism of muscle fatigue, demonstrate that the training-induced increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max), increase in critical power (CP) and acceleration of primary phase II of the  [Formula: see text] O(2) on kinetics (decrease in t(0.63)) is caused by elevated OXPHOS activity acting through a decrease in and slowing of the P(i) (inorganic phosphate) rise during the rest-to-work transition. This change leads to attenuation of the reaching by P(i) of Pi(peak), peak P(i) at which exercise is terminated because of fatigue. The delayed (in time and in relation to  [Formula: see text] O(2) increase) P(i) rise for a given power output (PO) in trained muscle causes P(i) to reach Pi(peak) (in very heavy exercise) after a longer time and at a higher  [Formula: see text] O(2); thus, exercise duration is lengthened, and  [Formula: see text] O(2max) is elevated compared to untrained muscle. The diminished P(i) increase during exercise with a given PO can cause P(i) to stabilize at a steady state less than P(ipeak), and exercise can continue potentially ad infinitum (heavy exercise), instead of rising unceasingly and ultimately reaching Pi(peak) and causing exercise termination (very heavy exercise). This outcome means that CP rises, as the given PO is now less than, and not greater than CP. Finally, the diminished P(i) increase (and other metabolite changes) results in, at a given PO (moderate exercise), the steady state of fluxes (including  [Formula: see text] O(2)) and metabolites being reached faster; thus, t(0.63) is shortened. This effect of elevated OXPHOS activity is possibly somewhat diminished by the training-induced decrease in Pi(peak). MDPI 2023-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10673597/ /pubmed/37999207 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13111111 Text en © 2023 by the author. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Korzeniewski, Bernard
Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title_full Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title_fullStr Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title_full_unstemmed Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title_short Training-Induced Increase in  [Formula: see text] O(2max) and Critical Power, and Acceleration of  [Formula: see text] O(2) on-Kinetics Result from Attenuated P(i) Increase Caused by Elevated OXPHOS Activity
title_sort training-induced increase in  [formula: see text] o(2max) and critical power, and acceleration of  [formula: see text] o(2) on-kinetics result from attenuated p(i) increase caused by elevated oxphos activity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10673597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37999207
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13111111
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