Graded reductions in pre‐exercise glycogen concentration do not augment exercise‐induced nuclear AMPK and PGC‐1α protein content in human muscle

Aug 31, 2020Experimental physiology

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

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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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