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Influence of preexercise muscle glycogen content on transcriptional activity of metabolic and myogenic genes in well-trained humans

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 04:31 authored by Emmanuel Churchley, Vernon Coffey, David Pedersen, Anthony Shield, Kate Carey, D Cameron-Smith, John Hawley
To determine whether pre-exercise muscle glycogen content influences the transcription of several early-response genes involved in the regulation of muscle growth, seven male strength-trained subjects performed one-legged cycling exercise to exhaustion to lower muscle glycogen levels (Low) in one leg compared with the leg with normal muscle glycogen (Norm) and then the following day completed a unilateral bout of resistance training (RT). Muscle biopsies from both legs were taken at rest, immediately after RT, and after 3 h of recovery. Resting glycogen content was higher in the control leg (Norm leg) than in the Low leg (435 +/- 87 vs. 193 +/- 29 mmol/kg dry wt; P < 0.01). RT decreased glycogen content in both legs (P < 0.05), but postexercise values remained significantly higher in the Norm than the Low leg (312 +/- 129 vs. 102 +/- 34 mmol/kg dry wt; P < 0.01). GLUT4 (3-fold-1 P < 0.01) and glycogenin mRNA abundance (2.5-fold; not significant) were elevated at rest in the Norm leg, but such differences were abolished after exercise. Preexercise mRNA abundance of atrogenes was also higher in the Norm compared with the Low leg [atrogin: similar to 14-fold, P < 0.01; RING (really interesting novel gene) finger: similar to 3-fold, P < 0.05] but decreased for atrogin in Norm following RT (P < 0.05). There were no differences in the mRNA abundance of myogenic regulatory factors and IGF-I in the Norm compared with the Low leg. Our results demonstrate that 1) low muscle glycogen content has variable effects on the basal transcription of select metabolic and myogenic genes at rest, and 2) any differences in basal transcription are completely abolished after a single bout of heavy resistance training. We conclude that commencing resistance exercise with low muscle glycogen does not enhance the activity of genes implicated in promoting hypertrophy.

History

Journal

Journal of Applied Physiology

Volume

102

Start page

1604

End page

1611

Total pages

8

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Place published

Bethesda

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2007 the American Physiological Society

Former Identifier

2006005819

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-09-20

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