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Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise

ABSTRACT: Glycogen particles are situated in key areas of the muscle cell in the vicinity of the main energy‐consumption sites and may be utilised heterogeneously dependent on the nature of the metabolic demands. The present study aimed to investigate the time course of fibre type‐specific utilisati...

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Autores principales: Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F., Ørtenblad, Niels, Emil Andersen, Ole, Thorsteinsson, Hallur, Kristiansen, Thea H., Bilde, Stine, Mikkelsen, Mads S., Nielsen, Joachim, Mohr, Magni, Overgaard, Kristian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9825866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36030498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/JP283225
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author Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F.
Ørtenblad, Niels
Emil Andersen, Ole
Thorsteinsson, Hallur
Kristiansen, Thea H.
Bilde, Stine
Mikkelsen, Mads S.
Nielsen, Joachim
Mohr, Magni
Overgaard, Kristian
author_facet Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F.
Ørtenblad, Niels
Emil Andersen, Ole
Thorsteinsson, Hallur
Kristiansen, Thea H.
Bilde, Stine
Mikkelsen, Mads S.
Nielsen, Joachim
Mohr, Magni
Overgaard, Kristian
author_sort Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F.
collection PubMed
description ABSTRACT: Glycogen particles are situated in key areas of the muscle cell in the vicinity of the main energy‐consumption sites and may be utilised heterogeneously dependent on the nature of the metabolic demands. The present study aimed to investigate the time course of fibre type‐specific utilisation of muscle glycogen in three distinct subcellular fractions (intermyofibrillar, IMF; intramyofibrillar, Intra; and subsarcolemmal, SS) during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise. Eighteen moderately to well‐trained male participants performed three periods of 10 × 45 s cycling at ∼105% watt max (EX1–EX3) coupled with 5 × 6 s maximal sprints at baseline and after each period. Muscle biopsies were sampled at baseline and after EX1 and EX3. A higher glycogen breakdown rate in type 2 compared to type 1 fibres was found during EX1 for the Intra (−72 vs. −45%) and IMF (−59 vs. −35%) glycogen fractions (P < 0.001) but with no differences for SS glycogen (−52 vs. −40%). In contrast, no fibre type differences were observed during EX2–EX3, where the utilisation of Intra and IMF glycogen in type 2 fibres was reduced, resulting in depletion of all three subcellular fractions to very low levels post‐exercise within both fibre types. Importantly, large heterogeneity in single‐fibre glycogen utilisation was present with an early depletion of especially Intra glycogen in individual type 2 fibres. In conclusion, there is a clear fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific glycogen utilisation during high‐intensity intermittent exercise, which varies with time course of exercise and is characterised by exacerbated pool‐specific glycogen depletion at the single‐fibre level. [Image: see text] KEY POINTS: Muscle glycogen is the major fuel during high‐intensity exercise and is stored in distinct subcellular areas of the muscle cell in close vicinity to the main energy consumption sites. In the present study quantitative electron microscopy imaging was used to investigate the utilisation pattern of three distinct subcellular muscle glycogen fractions during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise. It is shown that the utilisation differs dependent on fibre type, subcellular localisation and time course of exercise and with large single‐fibre heterogeneity. These findings expand on our understanding of subcellular muscle glycogen metabolism during exercise and may help us explain how reductions in muscle glycogen can attenuate muscle function even at only moderately lowered whole‐muscle glycogen concentrations.
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spelling pubmed-98258662023-01-09 Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F. Ørtenblad, Niels Emil Andersen, Ole Thorsteinsson, Hallur Kristiansen, Thea H. Bilde, Stine Mikkelsen, Mads S. Nielsen, Joachim Mohr, Magni Overgaard, Kristian J Physiol Muscle ABSTRACT: Glycogen particles are situated in key areas of the muscle cell in the vicinity of the main energy‐consumption sites and may be utilised heterogeneously dependent on the nature of the metabolic demands. The present study aimed to investigate the time course of fibre type‐specific utilisation of muscle glycogen in three distinct subcellular fractions (intermyofibrillar, IMF; intramyofibrillar, Intra; and subsarcolemmal, SS) during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise. Eighteen moderately to well‐trained male participants performed three periods of 10 × 45 s cycling at ∼105% watt max (EX1–EX3) coupled with 5 × 6 s maximal sprints at baseline and after each period. Muscle biopsies were sampled at baseline and after EX1 and EX3. A higher glycogen breakdown rate in type 2 compared to type 1 fibres was found during EX1 for the Intra (−72 vs. −45%) and IMF (−59 vs. −35%) glycogen fractions (P < 0.001) but with no differences for SS glycogen (−52 vs. −40%). In contrast, no fibre type differences were observed during EX2–EX3, where the utilisation of Intra and IMF glycogen in type 2 fibres was reduced, resulting in depletion of all three subcellular fractions to very low levels post‐exercise within both fibre types. Importantly, large heterogeneity in single‐fibre glycogen utilisation was present with an early depletion of especially Intra glycogen in individual type 2 fibres. In conclusion, there is a clear fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific glycogen utilisation during high‐intensity intermittent exercise, which varies with time course of exercise and is characterised by exacerbated pool‐specific glycogen depletion at the single‐fibre level. [Image: see text] KEY POINTS: Muscle glycogen is the major fuel during high‐intensity exercise and is stored in distinct subcellular areas of the muscle cell in close vicinity to the main energy consumption sites. In the present study quantitative electron microscopy imaging was used to investigate the utilisation pattern of three distinct subcellular muscle glycogen fractions during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise. It is shown that the utilisation differs dependent on fibre type, subcellular localisation and time course of exercise and with large single‐fibre heterogeneity. These findings expand on our understanding of subcellular muscle glycogen metabolism during exercise and may help us explain how reductions in muscle glycogen can attenuate muscle function even at only moderately lowered whole‐muscle glycogen concentrations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-09-18 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9825866/ /pubmed/36030498 http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/JP283225 Text en © 2022 The Authors. The Journal of Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Muscle
Vigh‐Larsen, Jeppe F.
Ørtenblad, Niels
Emil Andersen, Ole
Thorsteinsson, Hallur
Kristiansen, Thea H.
Bilde, Stine
Mikkelsen, Mads S.
Nielsen, Joachim
Mohr, Magni
Overgaard, Kristian
Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title_full Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title_fullStr Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title_full_unstemmed Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title_short Fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
title_sort fibre type‐ and localisation‐specific muscle glycogen utilisation during repeated high‐intensity intermittent exercise
topic Muscle
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9825866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36030498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/JP283225
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