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Early signaling responses to divergent exercise stimuli in skeletal muscle from well-trained humans

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posted on 2024-11-01, 02:58 authored by Vernon Coffey, Zhihui Zhong, Anthony Shield, Benedict Canny, Alexander Chibalin, Juleen Zierath, John Hawley
Skeletal muscle from strength- and endurance-trained individuals represents diverse adaptive states. In this regard, AMPK-PGC-1 alpha signaling mediates several adaptations to endurance training, while up-regulation of the Akt-TSC2-mTOR pathway may underlie increased protein synthesis after resistance exercise. We determined the effect of prior training history on signaling responses in seven strength- trained and six endurance-trained males who undertook 1 h cycling at 70% VO2peak or eight sets of five maximal repetitions of isokinetic leg extensions. Muscle biopsies were taken at rest, immediately and 3 h postexercise. AMPK phosphorylation increased after cycling in strength- trained (54%; P<0.05) but not endurance-trained subjects. Conversely, AMPK was elevated after resistance exercise in endurance-(114%; P<0.05), but not strength-trained subjects. Akt phosphorylation increased in endurance- (50%; P<0.05), but not strength-trained subjects after cycling but was unchanged in either group after resistance exercise. TSC2 phosphorylation was decreased (47%; P<0.05) in endurance- trained subjects following resistance exercise, but cycling had little effect on the phosphorylation state of this protein in either group. p70S6K phosphorylation increased in endurance- (118%; P<0.05), but not strength- trained subjects after resistance exercise, but was similar to rest in both groups after cycling. Similarly, phosphorylation of S6 protein, a substrate for p70 S6K, was increased immediately following resistance exercise in endurance- (129%; P<0.05), but not strength- trained subjects. In conclusion, a degree of "response plasticity" is conserved at opposite ends of the endurance-hypertrophic adaptation continuum. Moreover, prior training attenuates the exercise specific signaling responses involved in single mode adaptations to training.

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    ISSN - Is published in 08926638

Journal

The FASEBJ Journal

Volume

20

Start page

190

End page

192

Total pages

3

Publisher

The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

Place published

Bethesda, USA

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2005 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.

Former Identifier

2006001531

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

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