Experimental physiology

Lower muscle glycogen before exercise does not increase exercise-related activation of energy-regulating proteins in human muscle

Updated

Abstract

Pre-exercise muscle glycogen concentrations ranged from 208 ± 79 to 531 ± 83 mmol (kg dw) without affecting early signaling responses in skeletal muscle.

  • High-intensity exercise depleted muscle glycogen to less than 300 mmol (kg dw) across all trials.
  • Exercise induced similar increases in nuclear AMPK protein content and PGC-1α mRNA expression regardless of initial glycogen levels.
  • PGC-1α mRNA increase positively correlated with post-exercise glycogen concentration.
  • No changes were observed in the subcellular location of PGC-1α protein or several other related genes.
  • Commencing exercise with lower muscle glycogen did not enhance signaling for mitochondrial biogenesis.

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