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L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers

L‐Carnitine is critical for protection against bioaccumulation, long‐chain fatty acid transportation and energy production. Energy production becomes important as the body maintains lean mass, repairs muscles and recovers from oxidative stress. The aim was to investigate the effects of supplemented...

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Autores principales: Varney, Jessica Lyn, Fowler, Jason William, McClaughry, Trenda Clarice, Vignale, Karen, Caldas, Justina, Weil, Jordan Taylor, Coon, Craig Nelson
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7540169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32557872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13391
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author Varney, Jessica Lyn
Fowler, Jason William
McClaughry, Trenda Clarice
Vignale, Karen
Caldas, Justina
Weil, Jordan Taylor
Coon, Craig Nelson
author_facet Varney, Jessica Lyn
Fowler, Jason William
McClaughry, Trenda Clarice
Vignale, Karen
Caldas, Justina
Weil, Jordan Taylor
Coon, Craig Nelson
author_sort Varney, Jessica Lyn
collection PubMed
description L‐Carnitine is critical for protection against bioaccumulation, long‐chain fatty acid transportation and energy production. Energy production becomes important as the body maintains lean mass, repairs muscles and recovers from oxidative stress. The aim was to investigate the effects of supplemented L‐carnitine on protein turnover (PT), energy expenditure (EE) and carnitine metabolism in muscle/serum of Labrador Retrievers. In a series of experiments, all dogs were fed a low‐carnitine diet and sorted into one of two groups: L‐carnitine (LC) supplemented daily with 125 mg L‐carnitine and 3.75 g sucrose or placebo (P) supplemented with 4 g sucrose daily. The experiments consisted of analyses of muscle/serum for L‐carnitine content (EXP1), a protein turnover experiment (EXP2) and analysis of substrate utilization via indirect calorimetry (EXP3). EXP1: 20 Labradors (10 M/10 F) performed a 13 week running regimen. L‐Carnitine content was analysed in the serum and biceps femoris muscle before/after a 24.1 km run. LC serum had higher total (p < .001; p = .001), free (p < .001; p = .001) and esterified (p = .001; p = .003) L‐carnitine pre‐ and post‐run respectively. LC muscle had significantly higher free L‐carnitine post‐run (p = .034). EXP2: 26 Labs (13 M/13 F) performed a 60‐day running regimen. For the final run, half of the Labradors from each treatment rested and half ran 24.1 km. Twenty‐four Labradors received isotope infusion, and then, a biopsy of the biceps femoris of all 26 Labradors was taken to determine PT. Resting/exercised LC had a lower fractional breakdown rate (FBR) versus P group (p = .042). LC females had a lower FBR v. P females (p = .046). EXP3: Respiration of 16 Labradors (8 M/8 F) was measured via indirect calorimetry over 15 week. All dogs ran on a treadmill for 30 min at 30% VO(2) max (6.5 kph), resulting in higher maximum and mean EE in LC females v. P females (p = .021; p = .035). Implications for theory, practice and future research are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-75401692020-10-09 L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers Varney, Jessica Lyn Fowler, Jason William McClaughry, Trenda Clarice Vignale, Karen Caldas, Justina Weil, Jordan Taylor Coon, Craig Nelson J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) ORIGINAL ARTICLES L‐Carnitine is critical for protection against bioaccumulation, long‐chain fatty acid transportation and energy production. Energy production becomes important as the body maintains lean mass, repairs muscles and recovers from oxidative stress. The aim was to investigate the effects of supplemented L‐carnitine on protein turnover (PT), energy expenditure (EE) and carnitine metabolism in muscle/serum of Labrador Retrievers. In a series of experiments, all dogs were fed a low‐carnitine diet and sorted into one of two groups: L‐carnitine (LC) supplemented daily with 125 mg L‐carnitine and 3.75 g sucrose or placebo (P) supplemented with 4 g sucrose daily. The experiments consisted of analyses of muscle/serum for L‐carnitine content (EXP1), a protein turnover experiment (EXP2) and analysis of substrate utilization via indirect calorimetry (EXP3). EXP1: 20 Labradors (10 M/10 F) performed a 13 week running regimen. L‐Carnitine content was analysed in the serum and biceps femoris muscle before/after a 24.1 km run. LC serum had higher total (p < .001; p = .001), free (p < .001; p = .001) and esterified (p = .001; p = .003) L‐carnitine pre‐ and post‐run respectively. LC muscle had significantly higher free L‐carnitine post‐run (p = .034). EXP2: 26 Labs (13 M/13 F) performed a 60‐day running regimen. For the final run, half of the Labradors from each treatment rested and half ran 24.1 km. Twenty‐four Labradors received isotope infusion, and then, a biopsy of the biceps femoris of all 26 Labradors was taken to determine PT. Resting/exercised LC had a lower fractional breakdown rate (FBR) versus P group (p = .042). LC females had a lower FBR v. P females (p = .046). EXP3: Respiration of 16 Labradors (8 M/8 F) was measured via indirect calorimetry over 15 week. All dogs ran on a treadmill for 30 min at 30% VO(2) max (6.5 kph), resulting in higher maximum and mean EE in LC females v. P females (p = .021; p = .035). Implications for theory, practice and future research are discussed. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-06-17 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7540169/ /pubmed/32557872 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13391 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition published by Blackwell Verlag GmbH This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Varney, Jessica Lyn
Fowler, Jason William
McClaughry, Trenda Clarice
Vignale, Karen
Caldas, Justina
Weil, Jordan Taylor
Coon, Craig Nelson
L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title_full L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title_fullStr L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title_full_unstemmed L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title_short L‐Carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised Labrador Retrievers
title_sort l‐carnitine metabolism, protein turnover and energy expenditure in supplemented and exercised labrador retrievers
topic ORIGINAL ARTICLES
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7540169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32557872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13391
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