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1.
This study determined whether rates of protein synthesis increase after acute resistance exercise in skeletal muscle from severely diabetic rats. Previous studies consistently show that postexercise rates of protein synthesis are elevated in nondiabetic and moderately diabetic rats. Severely diabetic rats performed acute resistance exercise (n = 8) or remained sedentary (n = 8). A group of nondiabetic age-matched rats served as controls (n = 9). Rates of protein synthesis were measured 16 h after exercise. Plasma glucose concentrations were >500 mg/dl in the diabetic rats. Rates of protein synthesis (nmol phenylalanine incorporated. g muscle(-1). h(-1), means +/- SE) were not different between exercised (117 +/- 7) and sedentary (106 +/- 9) diabetic rats but were significantly (P < 0.05) lower than in sedentary nondiabetic rats (162 +/- 9) and in exercised nondiabetic rats (197 +/- 7). Circulating insulin concentrations were 442 +/- 65 pM in nondiabetic rats and 53 +/- 11 and 72 +/- 19 pM in sedentary and exercised diabetic rats, respectively. Plasma insulin-like growth factor I concentrations were reduced by 33% in diabetic rats compared with nondiabetic rats, and there was no difference between exercised and sedentary diabetic rats. Muscle insulin-like growth factor I was not affected by resistance exercise in diabetic rats. The results show that there is a critical concentration of insulin below which rates of protein synthesis begin to decline in vivo. In contrast to previous studies using less diabetic rats, severely diabetic rats cannot increase rates of protein synthesis after acute resistance exercise.  相似文献   

2.
This study had the following objectives: 1) to determine whether diabetic rats could increase muscle mass due to a physiological manipulation (chronic resistance exercise), 2) to determine whether exercise training status modifies the effect of the last bout of exercise on elevations in rates of protein synthesis, and 3) to determine whether chronic resistance exercise alters basal glycemia. Groups consisted of diabetic or nondiabetic rats that performed progressive resistance exercise for 8 wk, performed acute resistance exercise, or remained sedentary. Arterial plasma insulin in diabetic groups was reduced by about one-half (P < 0.05) compared with nondiabetic groups. Soleus and gastrocnemius-plantaris complex muscle wet weights were lower because of diabetes, but in response to chronic exercise these muscles hypertrophied in diabetic (0.028 +/- 0.003 vs. 0.032 +/- 0.0015 g/cm for sedentary vs. exercised soleus and 0.42 +/- 0.068 vs. 0.53 +/- 0.041 g/cm for sedentary vs. exercised gastrocnemius-plantaris, both P < 0.05) but not in nondiabetic (0.041 +/- 0.0026 vs. 0.042 +/- 0.003 g/cm for sedentary vs. exercised soleus and 0.72 +/- 0.015 vs. 0.69 +/- 0.013 g/cm for sedentary vs. exercised gastrocnemius-plantaris) rats when muscle weight was expressed relative to tibial length or body weight (data not shown). Another group of diabetic rats that lifted heavier weights showed muscle hypertrophy. Rates of protein synthesis were higher in red gastrocnemius in chronically exercised than in sedentary rats: 155 +/- 11 and 170 +/- 7 nmol phenylalanine incorporated x g muscle(-1) x h(-1) in exercised diabetic and nondiabetic rats vs. 110 +/- 14 and 143 +/- 7 nmol phenylalanine incorporated x g muscle(-1) x h(-1) in sedentary diabetic and nondiabetic rats. These elevations, however, were lower than in acutely exercised (but untrained) rats: 176 +/- 15 and 193 +/- 8 nmol phenylalanine incorporated x g muscle(-1) x h(-1) in diabetic and nondiabetic rats. Finally, chronic exercise training in diabetic rats was associated with reductions in basal glycemia, and such reductions did not occur in sedentary diabetic groups. These data demonstrate that, despite lower circulating insulin concentrations, diabetic rats can increase muscle mass in response to a physiological stimulus.  相似文献   

3.
Rates of protein synthesis are reduced in severely diabetic rats. A potential mechanism through which insulin can stimulate protein synthesis is modulation of the activity of eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B). The activity of this factor is elevated after exercise in nondiabetic rats but is markedly lower in skeletal muscle from nonexercised severely diabetic rats. We tested the hypothesis that a failure to increase eIF2B activity after exercise is one potential reason for a failure of severely diabetic rats to increase rates of protein synthesis after resistance exercise. Diabetic (partial pancreatectomy, plasma glucose >475 mg/dl) and nondiabetic male Sprague-Dawley rats (approximately 300 g) performed acute moderate-intensity resistance exercise or remained sedentary. Rates of protein synthesis were higher in nondiabetic rats and increased significantly with exercise, while no elevation was found in severely diabetic rats. The activity of eIF2B was higher (P < 0.05) in exercised nondiabetic than in sedentary nondiabetic rats (0.096 +/- 0.016 and 0.064 +/- 0.02 pmol GDP exchanged/min, respectively), but no difference was observed between sedentary and exercised diabetic rats (0.037 +/- 0.001 and 0.044 +/- 0.008 pmol GDP exchanged/min, respectively), and these activities were lower (P < 0.05) than in nondiabetic animals. These data suggest that severe hypoinsulinemia is associated with an inability to increase eIF2B activity in response to exercise.  相似文献   

4.
M J Fedele  T C Vary  P A Farrell 《Journal of applied physiology》2001,90(3):1166-73; discussion 1165
The purpose of this study was to examine whether immune neutralization of muscle-produced insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) would prevent an appropriate anabolic response to refeeding in diabetic rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were made diabetic by partial pancreatectomy and were randomly assigned to be either control-fed, fasted, or fasted-refed (n = 7-8 per group). Diabetes decreased rates of protein synthesis and increased rates of protein degradation in incubated epitrochlearis muscles (P < 0.05). In both groups of rats, fasting lowered protein synthesis and increased proteolysis and subsequent refeeding returned both parameters to near basal values (P < 0.05). Neutralization of muscle IGF-I by the addition of IGF-I antibody to the incubation medium reduced protein synthesis an average of 22% for all groups (P < 0.05). However, rates of protein degradation were not affected. In nondiabetic rats, refeeding increased protein synthesis in both control and antibody-treated muscles (P < 0.05). Refeeding also increased protein synthesis in the control muscles from diabetic rats (P < 0.01). In contrast, muscles from diabetic rats that were incubated with anti-IGF-I did not increase protein synthesis in response to refeeding. These data suggest that immune neutralization of muscle IGF-I in hypoinsulinemic rats negated the ability of endogenous IGF-I to promote protein synthesis and thereby prevented an appropriate anabolic response.  相似文献   

5.
Thesestudies determined whether increases in rates of protein synthesisobserved in skeletal muscle after moderate or severe acute-resistanceexercise were blunted by insulinopenia. Rats (n = 6-9 per group) were madeinsulin deficient by partial pancreatectomy or remained nondiabetic.Groups either remained sedentary or performed acute-resistance exercise16 h before rates of protein synthesis were measured in vivo. Exerciserequired 50 repetitions of standing on the hindlimbs with either 0.6 gbackpack wt/g body wt (moderate exercise) or 1.0 g backpack wt/g bodywt (severe exercise). Insulin-deficient rats had a mean blood glucoseconcentration >15 mM and reduced insulin concentrations in theplasma. Rates of protein synthesis in gastrocnemius muscle were notdifferent in all sedentary groups. The moderate-exercised nondiabeticgroup (192 ± 12 nmol phenylalanine incorporated · gmuscle1 · h1)and moderate-exercised diabetic group (215 ± 18) had significantly (P < 0.05, ANOVA) higher rates ofprotein synthesis than did respective sedentary groups. In contrast,diabetic rats that performed severe-resistance exercise had rates ofprotein synthesis (176 ± 12) that were not different(P > 0.05) from diabetic sedentaryrats (170 ± 9), whereas nondiabetic rats that performed severeexercise had higher (212 ± 24) rates compared withnondiabetic sedentary rats (178 ± 10) P < 0.05. The present data in combination with previous studies [J. D. Fluckey, T. C. Vary, L. S. Jefferson, and P. A. Farrell. Am. J. Physiol. 270 (Endocrinol. Metab. 33): E313-E319,1996] show that the amount of insulin required for an invivo permissive effect of insulin on rates of protein synthesis can bequite low after moderate-intensity resistance exercise. However, severe exercise in combination with low insulin concentrations can ablate ananabolic response.

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6.
Translational control of protein synthesis depends on numerous eukaryotic initiation factors (eIFs) and we have previously shown (Am. J. Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab. 276: E721-E727, 1999) that increases in one factor, eIF2B, are associated with increases in rates of protein synthesis after resistance exercise in rats. In the present study we investigated whether the eIF4E family of initiation factors is also involved with an anabolic response to exercise. Male Sprague-Dawley rats either remained sedentary (n = 6) or performed acute resistance exercise (n = 6), and rates of protein synthesis were assessed in vivo 16 h after the last session of resistance exercise. eIF4E complexed to eIF4G (eIF4E x eIF4G), eIF4E binding protein 1 (4E-BP1) complexed to eIF4E, and phosphorylation state of eIF4E and 4E-BP1 (gamma-form) were assessed in gastrocnemius. Rates of protein synthesis were higher in exercised rats compared with sedentary rats [205 +/- 8 (SE) vs. 164 +/- 5.5 nmol phenylalanine incorporated x g muscle(-1) x h(-1), respectively; P < 0.05]. Arterial plasma insulin concentrations were not different between the two groups. A trend (P = 0.09) for an increase in eIF4E x eIF4G with exercise was noted; however, no statistically significant differences were observed in any of the components of the eIF4E family in response to resistance exercise. These new data, along with our previous report on eIF2B, suggest that the regulation of peptide chain initiation after exercise is more dependent on eIF2B than on the eIF4E system.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the contractile properties of individual skinned muscle fibers from insulin-treated streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats after an endurance exercise training program. We hypothesized that single-fiber contractile function would decrease in the diabetic sedentary rats and that endurance exercise would preserve the function. In the study, 28 rats were assigned to either a nondiabetic sedentary, a nondiabetic exercise, a diabetic sedentary, or a diabetic exercise group. Rats in the diabetic groups received subcutaneous intermediate-lasting insulin daily. The exercise-trained rats ran on a treadmill at a moderate intensity for 60 min, five times per week. After 12 wk, the extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles were dissected. Single-fiber diameter, Ca(2+)-activated peak force, specific tension, activation threshold, and pCa(50) as well as the myosin heavy chain isoform expression (MHC) were determined. We found that in MHC type II fibers from extensor digitorum longus muscle, diameters were significantly smaller from diabetic sedentary rats compared with nondiabetic sedentary rats (P < 0.001). Among the nondiabetic rats, fiber diameters were smaller with exercise (P = 0.038). The absolute force-generating capacity of single fibers was lower in muscles from diabetic rats. There was greater specific tension (force normalized to cross-sectional area) by fibers from the rats that followed an endurance exercise program compared with sedentary. From the results, we conclude that alterations in the properties of contractile proteins are not implicated in the decrease in strength associated with diabetes and that endurance-exercise training does not prevent or increase muscle weakness in diabetic rats.  相似文献   

8.
Exercise training and sulfonylurea treatment, either individually or in combination, were evaluated for their effects on plasma glucose concentrations, oral glucose tolerance, and glucose clearance in the perfused hindquarter of diabetic rats. Female rats that were injected with streptozocin (45 mg/kg iv) and had plasma glucose concentrations between 11 and 25 mM were considered diabetic and divided into sedentary, glyburide-treated, exercise-trained, and glyburide-treated plus exercise-trained groups. The sedentary streptozocin-treated rats were severely diabetic, as indicated by elevated glucose concentrations, impaired insulin response during oral glucose tolerance tests, and lower rates of glucose clearance in hindlimb skeletal muscle. Neither 8 wk of exercise training nor 4 wk of glyburide treatment alone improved these parameters. In contrast, the diabetic rats that were both trained and treated with glyburide showed some improvement in glucose homeostasis, as evidenced by lower plasma glucose concentrations, an enhanced insulin response to an oral glucose load, and a decrease in the severity of skeletal muscle insulin resistance compared with the diabetic controls. These data suggest that glyburide treatment or exercise training alone does not alter glucose homeostasis in severely insulin-deficient diabetic rats; however, the combination of exercise training and glyburide treatment may interact to improve glucose homeostasis in these animals.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of this study was to examine whether immune neutralizationof muscle-produced insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) would preventan appropriate anabolic response to refeeding in diabetic rats. MaleSprague-Dawley rats were made diabetic by partial pancreatectomy andwere randomly assigned to be either control-fed, fasted, orfasted-refed (n = 7-8 per group). Diabetes decreased rates of protein synthesis and increased rates of protein degradation in incubated epitrochlearis muscles (P < 0.05). In both groups of rats, fasting lowered protein synthesis andincreased proteolysis and subsequent refeeding returned both parameters to near basal values (P < 0.05). Neutralization ofmuscle IGF-I by the addition of IGF-I antibody to the incubation mediumreduced protein synthesis an average of 22% for all groups(P < 0.05). However, rates of protein degradation werenot affected. In nondiabetic rats, refeeding increased proteinsynthesis in both control and antibody-treated muscles(P < 0.05). Refeeding also increased protein synthesisin the control muscles from diabetic rats (P < 0.01).In contrast, muscles from diabetic rats that were incubated withanti-IGF-I did not increase protein synthesis in response to refeeding.These data suggest that immune neutralization of muscle IGF-I inhypoinsulinemic rats negated the ability of endogenous IGF-I to promoteprotein synthesis and thereby prevented an appropriate anabolic response.

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10.
Our goal was to examine whether exercise training alleviates impaired nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-dependent dilatation of the basilar artery in Type 1 diabetic rats. To test this hypothesis, we measured in vivo diameter of the basilar artery in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats in response to NOS-dependent (acetylcholine) and -independent (nitroglycerin) agonists. To determine the potential role for nitric oxide in vasodilatation in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats, we examined responses after NG-monomethyl-l-arginine (l-NMMA). We found that acetylcholine produced dilatation of the basilar artery that was similar in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic rats. Acetylcholine produced only minimal vasodilatation in sedentary diabetic rats. However, exercise alleviated impaired acetylcholine-induced vasodilatation in diabetic rats. Nitroglycerin produced dilatation of the basilar artery that was similar in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats. l-NMMA produced similar inhibition of acetylcholine-induced dilatation of the basilar artery in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats. Finally, we found that endothelial NOS (eNOS) protein in the basilar artery was higher in diabetic compared with nondiabetic rats and that exercise increased eNOS protein in the basilar artery of nondiabetic and diabetic rats. We conclude that 1) exercise can alleviate impaired NOS-dependent dilatation of the basilar artery during diabetes mellitus, 2) the synthesis and release of nitric oxide accounts for dilatation of the basilar artery to acetylcholine in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats, and 3) exercise may exert its affect on cerebrovascular reactivity during diabetes by altering levels of eNOS protein in the basilar artery.  相似文献   

11.
The present study evaluated the ability of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) complexed with IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) to modulate the sepsis-induced inhibition of protein synthesis in gastrocnemius. Beginning 16 h after the induction of sepsis, either the binary complex or saline was injected twice daily via a tail vein, with measurements made 3 and 5 days later. By day 3, sepsis had reduced plasma IGF-I concentrations approximately 50% in saline-treated rats. Administration of the binary complex provided exogenous IGF-I to compensate for the sepsis-induced diminished plasma IGF-I. Sepsis decreased rates of protein synthesis in gastrocnemius relative to controls by limiting translational efficiency. Treatment of septic rats with the binary complex for 5 days attenuated the sepsis-induced inhibition of protein synthesis and restored translational efficiency to control values. Assessment of potential mechanisms regulating translational efficiency showed that neither the sepsis-induced change in gastrocnemius content of eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B), the amount of eIF4E associated with 4E binding protein-1 (4E-BP1), nor the phosphorylation state of 4E-BP1 or eIF4E were altered by the binary complex. Overall, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that decreases in plasma IGF-I are partially responsible for enhanced muscle catabolism during sepsis.  相似文献   

12.
The temporal pattern for changes in rates of protein synthesis and glucose uptake after resistance exercise, especially relative to each other, is not known. Male Sprague-Dawley rats performed acute resistance exercise (n = 7) or remained sedentary (n = 7 per group), and the following were assessed in vivo 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24 h later: rates of protein synthesis, rates of glucose uptake, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) activity, and p70(S6k) activity. Rates of protein synthesis in mixed gastrocnemius muscle did not increase until 12 h after exercise (e.g., at 12 h, sedentary = 138 +/- 4 vs. exercised = 178 +/- 6 nmol phenylalanine incorporated x g muscle(-1) x h(-1), mean +/- SE, P < 0.05), whereas at 6 h after exercise rates of glucose uptake were significantly elevated (sedentary = 0.18 +/- 0.020 vs. exercised = 0.38 +/- 0.024 micromol glucose 6-phosphate incorporated x kg muscle(-1) x min(-1), P < 0.05). At 24 h after exercise, rates of protein synthesis were still elevated, whereas glucose uptake had returned to basal levels. Arterial insulin concentrations were not different between groups at any time. Non-insulin-stimulated activities of PI3-kinase and p70(S6k) were higher at 6, 12, and 24 h after exercise (P < 0.05), and, generally, these occurred when rates of protein synthesis (12 and 24 h) and glucose uptake were elevated (6 and 12 but not 24 h) by exercise. These data suggest that regulators of protein synthesis and glucose uptake may respond to the same contraction-generated signals with different kinetics or that they respond to different intra- or extracellular signals that are generated by exercise.  相似文献   

13.
Chronic alcohol consumption decreases the concentration of the anabolic hormone IGF-I, and this change is associated with impaired muscle protein synthesis. The present study evaluated the ability of IGF-I complexed with IGF-binding protein (IGFBP)-3 to modulate the alcohol-induced inhibition of muscle protein synthesis in gastrocnemius. After 16 wk on an alcohol-containing diet, either the IGF-I/IGFBP-3 binary complex (BC) or saline was injected two times daily for three consecutive days. After the final injection of BC (3 h), plasma IGF-I concentrations were elevated in alcohol-fed rats to values not different from those of similarly treated control animals. Alcohol feeding decreased the basal rate of muscle protein synthesis by limiting translational efficiency. BC treatment of alcohol-fed rats increased protein synthesis back to basal control values, but the rate remained lower than that of BC-injected control rats. The BC partially reversed the alcohol-induced decrease in the binding of eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)4E with eIF4G. This change was associated with reversal of the alcohol-induced dephosphorylation of eIF4G but was independent of changes in the phosphorylation of either 4E-BP1 or eIF4E. However, BC reversed the alcohol-induced increase in IGFBP-1 and muscle myostatin, known negative regulators of IGF-I action and muscle mass. Hence, exogenous IGF-I, administered as part of a BC to increase its circulating half-life, can in part reverse the decreased protein synthesis observed in muscle from chronic alcohol-fed rats by stimulating selected components of translation initiation. The data support the role of IGF-I as a mediator of chronic alcohol myopathy in rats.  相似文献   

14.
R Rauramaa 《Medical biology》1982,60(3):139-143
The effect of acute physical exercise on skeletal muscle glycogen content and on lipoprotein lipase activity of muscle, adipose and lung tissues was studied in streptozotocin diabetic and control rats. Rats were accustomed to treadmill running for two weeks after streptozotocin treatment. For an exercise bout of moderate intensity rats were randomly divided into two groups: one was sacrificed immediately after exercise and the other 24 hours afterwards. In addition there was a nonexercised sedentary group. No depletion of glycogen was observed after exercise in the vastus lateralis muscle of control (nondiabetic) rats. No difference in glycogen utilization was found in soleus muscle between diabetic and control rats. In diabetic rats a slight decrease occurred in the lipoprotein lipase activity in adipose tissue immediately after exercise, while in control rats there was a significant decline 24 hours after exercise. In soleus muscle a slight but significant increase of lipoprotein lipase activity occurred 24 hours after exercise in diabetic rats but not in control rats. The results suggest that nonketotic streptozotocin diabetes of short duration does not influence muscle glycogen in the resting state, but glycogen utilization is disturbed in white muscle during moderate treadmill running in untrained diabetic rats. The increase in lipoprotein lipase activity after physical exercise in red muscle of diabetic rats occurs during the recovery phase.  相似文献   

15.
Both exercise and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) are known to have major hypertrophic effects in skeletal muscle; however, the interactive effect of exogenous IGF-I and exercise on muscle protein turnover or the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway has not been reported. In the present study, we have examined the interaction between endurance exercise training and IGF-I treatment on muscle protein turnover and the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the postexercise period. Adult male rats (270-280 g) were randomized to receive 5 consecutive days of progressive treadmill exercise and/or IGF-I treatment (1 mg. kg body wt(-1). day(-1)). Twenty-four hours after the last bout of exercise, the rate of protein breakdown in incubated muscles was significantly reduced compared with that in unexercised rats. This was associated with a significant reduction in the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome and the rate of ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent casein hydrolysis in muscle extracts from exercised compared with unexercised rats. In contrast, the muscle expression of the 20S proteasome subunit beta-1, ubiquitin, and the 14-kDa E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme was not altered by exercise or IGF-I treatment 24 h postexercise. Exercise had no effect on the rates of total mixed muscle protein synthesis in incubated muscles 24 h postexercise. IGF-I treatment had no effect on muscle weights or the rates of protein turnover 24 h after endurance exercise. These results suggest that a suppression of the ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathway after endurance exercise may contribute to the acute postexercise net protein gain.  相似文献   

16.
Previous results by use of a model of resistance exercise consisting of nonvoluntary electrical contraction of rat skeletal muscle have shown that significant gastrocnemius muscle enlargement was produced after 16 wk of chronic concentric resistance training with progressively increased weights but not after the same training program without weights (J. Appl. Physiol. 65: 950-954, 1988). In the present study we examined whether this differential effect on muscle mass between high- and low-resistance exercise is mediated through differential actions on muscle protein synthesis rates. In addition, we determined whether accumulation of specific mRNA quantities had a primary role in the protein synthesis response to this type of exercise. The data revealed that as little as 8 min of total contractile duration increased gastrocnemius protein synthesis rates by nearly 50%. Contrary to our hypothesis, post-exercise protein synthesis rates do not appear to be differentially regulated by the resistance imposed on the muscle during exercise but rather by the number of repetitions performed during the acute bout. This observation, the failure of high-frequency chronic training to produce gastrocnemius enlargement, and the relatively minor effects on mRNA levels collectively suggest that translational and posttranslational mechanisms, including protein degradation, may be the principal processes by which gastrocnemius protein expression is regulated in this model of stimulated concentric exercise.  相似文献   

17.
Recent studies have implicated the mTOR-signaling pathway as a primary component for muscle growth in mammals. The purpose of this investigation was to examine signaling pathways for muscle protein synthesis after resistance exercise. Sprague-Dawley rats (male, 6 mo old) were assigned to either resistance exercise or control groups. Resistance exercise was accomplished in operantly conditioned animals using a specially designed flywheel apparatus. Rats performed two sessions of resistance exercise, separated by 48 h, each consisting of 2 sets of 25 repetitions. Sixteen hours after the second session, animals were killed, and soleus muscles were examined for rates of protein synthesis with and without insulin and/or rapamycin (mTOR inhibitor) and/or PD-098059 (PD; MEK kinase inhibitor). Results of this study demonstrated that rates of synthesis were higher (P < 0.05) with insulin after exercise compared with without insulin, or to control muscles, regardless of insulin. Rapamycin lowered (P < 0.05) rates of synthesis in controls, with or without insulin, and after exercise without insulin. However, insulin was able to overcome the inhibition of rapamycin after exercise (P < 0.05). PD had no effect on protein synthesis in control rats, but the addition of PD to exercised muscle resulted in lower (P < 0.05) rates of synthesis, and this inhibition was not rescued by insulin. Western blot analyses demonstrated that the inhibitors used in the present study were selective and effective for preventing activation of specific signaling proteins. Together, these results suggest that the insulin-facilitated increase of muscle protein synthesis after resistance exercise requires multiple signaling pathways.  相似文献   

18.
Our goal was to examine whether exercise training (ExT) could normalize impaired nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-dependent dilation of cerebral (pial) arterioles during type 1 diabetes (T1D). We measured the in vivo diameter of pial arterioles in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats in response to an endothelial NOS (eNOS)-dependent (ADP), an neuronal NOS (nNOS)-dependent [N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)], and a NOS-independent (nitroglycerin) agonist. In addition, we measured superoxide anion levels in brain tissue under basal conditions in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats. Furthermore, we used Western blot analysis to determine eNOS and nNOS protein levels in cerebral vessels/brain tissue in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats. We found that ADP and NMDA produced a dilation of pial arterioles that was similar in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic rats. In contrast, ADP and NMDA produced only minimal vasodilation in sedentary diabetic rats. ExT restored impaired ADP- and NMDA-induced vasodilation observed in diabetic rats to that observed in nondiabetics. Nitroglycerin produced a dilation of pial arterioles that was similar in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic and diabetic rats. Superoxide levels in cortex tissue were similar in sedentary and exercised nondiabetic rats, were increased in sedentary diabetic rats, and were normalized by ExT in diabetic rats. Finally, we found that eNOS protein was increased in diabetic rats and further increased by ExT and that nNOS protein was not influenced by T1D but was increased by ExT. We conclude that ExT can alleviate impaired eNOS- and nNOS-dependent responses of pial arterioles during T1D.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Groups of lean or pre-obese LA/N-cp rats were subjected to a program of vigorous exercise (less than 4 hr/day) or remained sedentary from 6 weeks until 12 weeks of age. Sedentary pre-obese rats gained weight twice as rapidly as sedentary lean rats. Exercise treatment resulted in greater decrements in body wt in obese than in lean rats, but did not result in absolute weight loss in either group. At 12 weeks of age, fat pad weights in principle depots were 10-15 times greater in corpulent than in lean rats and were significantly smaller in the exercised groups of both phenotypes, and corresponded with lower relative adiposity compared to corresponding sedentary groups. Heart weights were greater in corpulent than lean, while gastrocnemius muscle weights were similar in both phenotypes. Exercise was without effect on the weight of either muscle tissue in either phenotype. Interscapular brown adipose tissue weights and the IBAT:BW ratio were greater in obese than in lean rats. IBAT weights were lower in exercised than sedentary rats of either phenotype, but the IBAT:BW ratio was lower only in the obese exercised rats. In sedentary rats, L-alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme activity were greater in obese than lean, and exercise treatment resulted in increased L-alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme only in lean rats. These results are consistent with a redistribution of energy expenditure from energy storing to energy dissipating pathways following vigorous exercise, resulting in slowed rates of weight gain and body fat accretion in both lean and obese animals, with the most significant decrements among pre-obese rats.  相似文献   

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