Glucose uptake and transport in contracting, perfused rat muscle with different pre‐contraction glycogen concentrations.
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 427 (1) , 347-359
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1990.sp018175
Abstract
1. Glucose uptake and transport, muscle glycogen, free glucose and glucose-6-phosphate concentrations were studied in perfused resting and contracting rat skeletal muscle with different pre-contraction glycogen concentrations. Rats were pre-conditioned by a combination of swimming exercise and diet, resulting in either low (glycogen-depleted rats), normal (control rats) or high (supercompensated rats) muscle glycogen concentrations at the time their hindlimbs were perfused. 2. Compared with control rats, pre-contraction muscle glycogen concentration was approximately 40% lower in glycogen-depleted rats, whereas it was 40% higher in supercompensated rats. Muscle glycogen break-down correlated positively (r = 0.76; P 0.001) with pre-contraction muscle glycogen concentration. 3. Glucose uptake during contractions was approximately 50% higher in glycogen-depleted hindquarters than in control hindquarters; in supercompensated hindquarters it was 30% lower. When rats with similar muscle glycogen concentrations were compared, glucose uptake in hindquarters from rats that had exercised on the preceding day was approximately 20% higher than in hindquarters from rats that had not exercised on the preceding day. 4. Muscle membrane glucose transport, as measured by the rate of accumulation of 14C-3-O-methylglucose in the contracting muscles, was 25% lower in super-compensated than in glycogen-depleted muscles at the onset as well as the end of the 15 min contraction period. 5. Intracellular concentrations of free glucose and glucose-6-phosphate were higher at rest and during the entire 15-min stimulation period in supercompensated muscles than in glycogen-depleted muscles, and glucose uptake during contractions correlated negatively with free glucose (r = -0.52; P < 0.01) as well as with glucose-6-phosphate (r = -0.49; P < 0.01) concentrations. 6. It is concluded that: (a) The rate of glucose uptake in contracting skeletal muscle is dependent on the pre-contraction muscle glycogen concentration. Regulating mechanisms include limitations of membrane glucose transport as well as of glucosem etabolism. (b) Contractions on the preceding day have a stimulating effect on glucose uptake during contractions of the same muscles on the next day.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glucose formation in human skeletal muscle. Influence of glycogen contentBiochemical Journal, 1989
- Exercise-Induced Increase in Glucose Transporters in Plasma Membranes of Rat Skeletal Muscle*Endocrinology, 1989
- Kinetics of glucose disposal in whole body and across the forearm in man.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1987
- Increased Muscle Glucose Uptake After Exercise: No Need for Insulin During ExerciseDiabetes, 1985
- Glucose 6-phosphate effects on deoxyglucose, glucose and methylglucose transport in rat adipocytes. Evidence for intracellular regulation of sugar transport by glucose metabolitesBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Cell Research, 1984
- The effect of different diets and of insulin on the hormonal response to prolonged exerciseActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1979
- Glucose and Amino Acid Metabolism in Perfused Skeletal Muscle: Effect of DichloroacetateDiabetes, 1978
- Evaluation of the isolated perfused rat hindquarter for the study of muscle metabolismBiochemical Journal, 1971
- Muscle Metabolites during Submaximal and Maximal Exercise in ManScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1970
- Diet, Muscle Glycogen and Physical PerformanceActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1967