Gehlert Sebastian, Weinisch Patrick, Römisch-Margl Werner, Jaspers Richard T, Artati Anna, Adamski Jerzy, Dyar Kenneth A, Aussieker Thorben, Jacko Daniel, Bloch Wilhelm, Wackerhage Henning, Kastenmüller Gabi
Department for Biosciences of Sports, Institute of Sport Science, University of Hildesheim, 31139 Hildesheim, Germany.
Institute of Cardiovascular Research and Sports Medicine, German Sport University, 50933 Cologne, Germany.
Metabolites. 2022 May 16;12(5):445. doi: 10.3390/metabo12050445.
Resistance training promotes metabolic health and stimulates muscle hypertrophy, but the precise routes by which resistance exercise (RE) conveys these health benefits are largely unknown.
To investigate how acute RE affects human skeletal muscle metabolism.
We collected vastus lateralis biopsies from six healthy male untrained volunteers at rest, before the first of 13 RE training sessions, and 45 min after the first and last bouts of RE. Biopsies were analysed using untargeted mass spectrometry-based metabolomics.
We measured 617 metabolites covering a broad range of metabolic pathways. In the untrained state RE altered 33 metabolites, including increased 3-methylhistidine and N-lactoylvaline, suggesting increased protein breakdown, as well as metabolites linked to ATP (xanthosine) and NAD (N1-methyl-2-pyridone-5-carboxamide) metabolism; the bile acid chenodeoxycholate also increased in response to RE in muscle opposing previous findings in blood. Resistance training led to muscle hypertrophy, with slow type I and fast/intermediate type II muscle fibre diameter increasing by 10.7% and 10.4%, respectively. Comparison of post-exercise metabolite levels between trained and untrained state revealed alterations of 46 metabolites, including decreased N-acetylated ketogenic amino acids and increased beta-citrylglutamate which might support growth. Only five of the metabolites that changed after acute exercise in the untrained state were altered after chronic training, indicating that training induces multiple metabolic changes not directly related to the acute exercise response.
The human skeletal muscle metabolome is sensitive towards acute RE in the trained and untrained states and reflects a broad range of adaptive processes in response to repeated stimulation.
抗阻训练可促进代谢健康并刺激肌肉肥大,但抗阻运动(RE)带来这些健康益处的确切途径在很大程度上尚不清楚。
研究急性RE如何影响人体骨骼肌代谢。
我们从6名健康的未受过训练的男性志愿者身上采集了股外侧肌活检样本,分别在静息状态、13次RE训练课程的第一次训练前、第一次和最后一次RE训练后45分钟采集。使用基于非靶向质谱的代谢组学方法对活检样本进行分析。
我们测量了617种代谢物,涵盖广泛的代谢途径。在未训练状态下,RE改变了33种代谢物,包括3-甲基组氨酸和N-乳酰缬氨酸增加,提示蛋白质分解增加,以及与ATP(黄苷)和NAD(N1-甲基-2-吡啶酮-5-甲酰胺)代谢相关的代谢物;胆汁酸鹅去氧胆酸在肌肉中对RE的反应也增加,这与之前血液中的研究结果相反。抗阻训练导致肌肉肥大,I型慢肌纤维和II型快/中间肌纤维直径分别增加了10.7%和10.4%。训练状态和未训练状态下运动后代谢物水平的比较显示有46种代谢物发生了改变,包括N-乙酰化生酮氨基酸减少和β-柠檬酰谷氨酸增加,这可能支持生长。在未训练状态下急性运动后发生变化的代谢物中,只有5种在慢性训练后发生了改变,表明训练诱导了多种与急性运动反应不直接相关的代谢变化。
人体骨骼肌代谢组在训练和未训练状态下对急性RE均敏感,并反映了对反复刺激的广泛适应性过程。