Richter E A, Garetto L P, Goodman M N, Ruderman N B
J Clin Invest. 1982 Apr;69(4):785-93. doi: 10.1172/jci110517.
Muscle glycogen stores are depleted during exercise and are rapidly repleted during the recovery period. To investigate the mechanism for this phenomenon, untrained male rats were run for 45 min on a motor-driven treadmill and the ability of their muscles to utilize glucose was then assessed during perfusion of their isolated hindquarters. Glucose utilization by the hindquarter was the same in exercised and control rats perfused in the absence of added insulin; however, when insulin (30-40,000 muU/ml) was added to the perfusate, glucose utilization was greater after exercise. Prior exercise lowered both, the concentration of insulin that half-maximally stimulated glucose utilization (exercise, 150 muU/ml; control, 480 muU/ml) and modestly increased its maximum effect. The increase in insulin sensitivity persisted for 4 h following exercise, but was not present after 24 h. The rate-limiting step in glucose utilization enhanced by prior exercise appeared to be glucose transport across the cell membrane, as in neither control nor exercised rats did free glucose accumulate in the muscle cell. Following exercise, the ability of insulin to stimulate the release of lactate into the perfusate was unaltered; however its ability to stimulate the incorporation of [(14)C]glucose into glycogen in certain muscles was enhanced. Thus at a concentration of 75 muU/ml insulin stimulated glycogen synthesis eightfold more in the fast-twitch red fibers of the red gastrocnemius than it did in the same muscle of nonexercised rats. In contrast, insulin only minimally increased glycogen synthesis in the fast-twitch white fibers of the gastrocnemius, which were not glycogen-depleted. The uptake of 2-deoxyglucose by these muscles followed a similar pattern suggesting that glucose transport was also differentially enhanced. Prior exercise did not enhance the ability of insulin to convert glycogen synthase from its glucose-6-phosphate-dependent (D) to its glucose-6-phosphate-independent (1) form. On the other hand, following exercise, insulin prevented a marked decrease in muscle glucose-6-phosphate, which could have diminished synthase activity in situ. The possibility that exercise enhanced the ability of insulin to convert glycogen synthase D to an intermediate form of the enzyme, more sensitive to glucose-6-phosphate, remains to be explored. These results suggest that following exercise, glucose transport and glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle are enhanced due at least in part to an increase in insulin sensitivity. They also suggest that this increase in insulin sensitivity occurs predominantly in muscle fibers that are deglycogenated during exercise.
运动期间肌肉糖原储备会被耗尽,而在恢复期会迅速补充。为了研究这一现象的机制,将未经训练的雄性大鼠放在电动跑步机上跑45分钟,然后在灌注其分离的后肢时评估其肌肉利用葡萄糖的能力。在没有添加胰岛素的情况下进行灌注时,运动大鼠和对照大鼠后肢的葡萄糖利用率相同;然而,当向灌注液中添加胰岛素(30 - 40,000 μU/ml)时,运动后葡萄糖利用率更高。先前的运动降低了半数最大刺激葡萄糖利用的胰岛素浓度(运动组为150 μU/ml;对照组为480 μU/ml),并适度增加了其最大效应。运动后胰岛素敏感性的增加持续4小时,但24小时后则不存在。先前运动增强的葡萄糖利用的限速步骤似乎是葡萄糖跨细胞膜的转运,因为在对照大鼠和运动大鼠中,肌肉细胞内均未积累游离葡萄糖。运动后,胰岛素刺激乳酸释放到灌注液中的能力未改变;然而,其刺激[(14)C]葡萄糖掺入某些肌肉糖原的能力增强。因此,在胰岛素浓度为75 μU/ml时,它刺激红色腓肠肌快肌红纤维中的糖原合成比未运动大鼠相同肌肉中的糖原合成多八倍。相比之下,胰岛素仅使腓肠肌快肌白纤维中的糖原合成略有增加,而这些纤维并未出现糖原耗尽。这些肌肉对2 - 脱氧葡萄糖的摄取遵循类似模式,表明葡萄糖转运也有差异地增强。先前的运动并未增强胰岛素将糖原合酶从其依赖葡萄糖 - 6 - 磷酸的(D)形式转化为不依赖葡萄糖 - 6 - 磷酸的(I)形式的能力。另一方面,运动后,胰岛素阻止了肌肉中葡萄糖 - 6 - 磷酸的显著下降,而这种下降可能会原位降低合酶活性。运动增强胰岛素将糖原合酶D转化为对葡萄糖 - 6 - 磷酸更敏感的酶的中间形式的能力这一可能性仍有待探索。这些结果表明,运动后骨骼肌中的葡萄糖转运和糖原合成至少部分由于胰岛素敏感性增加而增强。它们还表明,这种胰岛素敏感性的增加主要发生在运动期间糖原耗竭的肌纤维中。