Differential utilisation of subcellular skeletal muscle glycogen pools: a comparative analysis between 1 and 15 min of maximal exercise

Mar 19, 2024The Journal of physiology

Different use of muscle sugar stores inside cells during 1 versus 15 minutes of intense exercise

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Abstract

Intermyofibrillar glycogen was preferentially utilized during 1-minute maximal exercise, while intramyofibrillar glycogen was preferentially utilized during 15-minute maximal exercise.

  • Distinct pools of glycogen in skeletal muscle are located in intermyofibrillar, intramyofibrillar, and subsarcolemmal compartments.
  • 1 minute of maximal exercise is associated with the use of intermyofibrillar glycogen, whereas 15 minutes of maximal exercise is linked to the use of intramyofibrillar glycogen.
  • Lower carbohydrate and energy intake after glycogen-depleting exercise resulted in decreased glycogen availability across all pools.
  • Reduced glycogen availability was characterized by smaller particle sizes in all compartments and lower numerical density specifically in the intramyofibrillar and subsarcolemmal compartments.
  • Exercise intensity may influence the utilization of different subcellular glycogen pools.

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