Erschienen in:
01.07.2010 | Original Article
SIRT1, AMP-activated protein kinase phosphorylation and downstream kinases in response to a single bout of sprint exercise: influence of glucose ingestion
verfasst von:
Borja Guerra, Amelia Guadalupe-Grau, Teresa Fuentes, Jesús Gustavo Ponce-González, David Morales-Alamo, Hugo Olmedillas, José Guillén-Salgado, Alfredo Santana, José A. L. Calbet
Erschienen in:
European Journal of Applied Physiology
|
Ausgabe 4/2010
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Abstract
This study was designed to examine potential in vivo mechanisms of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylation inhibition and its downstream signaling consequences during the recovery period after a single bout of sprint exercise. Sprint exercise induces Thr172-AMPK phosphorylation and increased PGC-1α mRNA, by an unknown mechanism. Muscle biopsies were obtained in 15 young healthy men in response to a 30-s sprint exercise (Wingate test) randomly distributed into two groups: the fasting (n = 7, C) and the glucose group (n = 8, G), who ingested 75 g of glucose 1 h before exercising to inhibit AMPKα phosphorylation. Exercise elicited different patterns of Ser221-ACCβ, Ser473-Akt and Thr642-AS160 phosphorylation, during the recovery period after glucose ingestion. Thirty minutes after the control sprint, Ser485-AMPKα1/Ser491-AMPKα2 phosphorylation was reduced by 33% coinciding with increased Thr172-AMPKα phosphorylation (both, P < 0.05). Glucose abolished the 30-min Thr172-AMPKα phosphorylation. Ser221-ACCβ phosphorylation was elevated immediately following and 30 min after exercise in C and G, implying a dissociation between Thr172-AMPKα and Ser221-ACCβ phosphorylation. Two hours after the sprint, PGC-1α protein expression remained unchanged while SIRT1 (its upstream deacetylase) was increased. Glucose ingestion abolished the SIRT1 response without any significant effect on PGC-1α protein expression. In conclusion, glucose ingestion prior to a sprint exercise profoundly affects Thr172-AMPKα phosphorylation and its downstream signaling during the recovery period.