Gibala Martin
Department of Kinesiology, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada.
Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2009 Jun;34(3):428-32. doi: 10.1139/H09-046.
From a cell-signaling perspective, short-duration intense muscular work is typically associated with resistance training and linked to pathways that stimulate growth. However, brief repeated sessions of high-intensity interval exercise training (HIT) induce rapid phenotypic changes that resemble traditional endurance training. Given the oxidative phenotype that is rapidly upregulated by HIT, it is plausible that metabolic adaptations to this type of exercise could be mediated in part through signaling pathways normally associated with endurance training. A key controller of oxidative enzyme expression in skeletal muscle is peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1alpha (PGC-1alpha), a transcriptional coactivator that serves to coordinate mitochondrial biogenesis. Most studies of acute PGC-1alpha regulation in humans have used very prolonged exercise interventions; however, it was recently shown that a surprisingly small dose of very intense interval exercise, equivalent to only 2 min of all-out cycling, was sufficient to increase PGC-1alpha mRNA during recovery. Intense interval exercise has also been shown to acutely increase the activity of signaling pathways linked to PGC-1alpha and mitochondrial biogenesis, including AMP-activated protein kinase (alpha1 and alpha2 subunits) and the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. In contrast, signaling pathways linked to muscle growth, including protein kinase B/Akt and downstream targets p70 ribosomal S6 kinase and 4E binding protein 1, are generally unchanged after acute interval exercise. Signaling through AMP-activated protein kinase and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase to PGC-1alpha may therefore explain, in part, the metabolic remodeling induced by HIT, including mitochondrial biogenesis and an increased capacity for glucose and fatty acid oxidation.
从细胞信号传导的角度来看,短时间的高强度肌肉工作通常与阻力训练相关,并与刺激生长的信号通路有关。然而,简短重复的高强度间歇运动训练(HIT)会引发快速的表型变化,类似于传统的耐力训练。鉴于HIT能迅速上调氧化表型,这种类型运动的代谢适应可能部分是通过通常与耐力训练相关的信号通路介导的,这是合理的。骨骼肌中氧化酶表达的关键调控因子是过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体γ共激活因子1α(PGC-1α),它是一种转录共激活因子,用于协调线粒体生物合成。大多数关于人类急性PGC-1α调控的研究都使用了非常长时间的运动干预;然而,最近有研究表明,小剂量的高强度间歇运动,相当于仅2分钟的全力骑行,就足以在恢复过程中增加PGC-1α mRNA。高强度间歇运动还被证明能急性增加与PGC-1α和线粒体生物合成相关的信号通路的活性,包括AMP激活的蛋白激酶(α1和α2亚基)和p38丝裂原激活的蛋白激酶。相比之下,与肌肉生长相关的信号通路,包括蛋白激酶B/Akt及其下游靶点p70核糖体S6激酶和4E结合蛋白1,在急性间歇运动后通常没有变化。因此,通过AMP激活的蛋白激酶和p38丝裂原激活的蛋白激酶向PGC-1α的信号传导可能部分解释了HIT诱导的代谢重塑,包括线粒体生物合成以及葡萄糖和脂肪酸氧化能力的增加。