Carbohydrate improves exercise capacity but does not affect subcellular lipid droplet morphology, AMPK and p53 signalling in human skeletal muscle

Mar 27, 2021The Journal of physiology

Carbohydrates increase exercise ability but do not change muscle fat storage or energy and stress signals in human muscle

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Abstract

Exercise decreased lipid droplet content in type I and IIa muscle fibers by approximately 50% and 30%, respectively.

  • Muscle glycogen levels dropped from approximately 700 to 250 mmol kgDW after exercise.
  • Type I fibers utilized glycogen more than type II fibers, with about 40% versus 10% utilization, respectively.
  • Lipid droplet number decreased in both central and peripheral regions of type I and IIa fibers, while lipid droplet size reduction was exclusive to type I fibers.
  • Carbohydrate feeding during exercise did not significantly alter glycogen or intramuscular triglyceride utilization in either fiber type.
  • Key cell signaling pathways related to mitochondrial function were similarly activated by exercise, regardless of carbohydrate feeding.

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