Enhanced muscle glucose metabolism after exercise: modulation by local factors

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Studies in the rat suggest that after voluntary exercise there are two phases of glycogen repletion in skeletal muscle (preceding study). In phase I glucose utilization and glycogen synthesis are enhanced both in the presence and absence of insulin, whereas in phase II only the increase in the presence of insulin is found. To determine whether these alterations and in particular those mediated by insulin are due to local or systemic factors, one hindlimb of an anesthetized rat was electrically stimulated, and both hindlimbs were perfused immediately thereafter. Glucose and glycogen metabolism in the stimulated leg closely mimicked that observed previously after voluntary exercise on a treadmill. With no insulin added to the perfusate, glucose incorporation into glycogen was markedly enhanced in muscles that were glycogen depleted as were the uptake of 2-deoxyglucose and 3-O-methylglucose. Likewise, the stimulation of these processes by insulin was enhanced and continued to be so 2 h later when the muscles of the stimulated leg had substantially repleted their glycogen stores. The results suggest that the increases in insulin-mediated glucose utilization and glycogen synthesis in muscle after exercise are modulated by local contraction-induced factors.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology (Consolidated)
Volume246
Issue number6 Pt 1
Pages (from-to)E476-E482
Number of pages7
ISSN0002-9513
Publication statusPublished - 1984

    Research areas

  • Adenosine Triphosphate, Animals, Deoxyglucose, Electric Stimulation, Glucose, Glycogen, Glycogen Synthase, Hindlimb, In Vitro Techniques, Insulin, Male, Motor Activity, Muscles, Phosphocreatine, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains

ID: 154759647