Petrick 2019 Biochem J: Difference between revisions
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|preparations=Permeabilized tissue | |preparations=Permeabilized tissue | ||
|topics=ADP, Phosphate, Fatty acid | |topics=ADP, Phosphate, Substrate, Fatty acid | ||
|couplingstates=OXPHOS | |couplingstates=LEAK, OXPHOS | ||
|pathways=F, N, NS | |pathways=F, N, NS | ||
|instruments=Oxygraph-2k | |instruments=Oxygraph-2k | ||
|additional= | |additional=2019-01, | ||
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Revision as of 13:00, 7 February 2019
Petrick HL, Holloway GP (2019) High intensity exercise inhibits carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I sensitivity to L-carnitine. Biochem J [Epub ahead of print]. |
Petrick HL, Holloway GP (2019) Biochem J
Abstract: The decline in fat oxidation at higher power outputs of exercise is a complex interaction between several mechanisms, however the influence of mitochondrial bioenergetics in this process remains elusive. Therefore, using permeabilized muscle fibers from mouse skeletal muscle, we aimed to determine if acute exercise altered mitochondrial sensitivity to 1) adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and inorganic phosphate (Pi), or 2) carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I (CPT-I) independent (palmitoylcarnitine, PC) and dependent (palmitoyl-CoA (P-CoA), malonyl-CoA (M-CoA), and L-carnitine) substrates, in an intensity-dependent manner. As the apparent ADP Km increased to a similar extent following low (LI) and high (HI) intensity exercise compared to sedentary (SED) animals, and Pi sensitivity was unaltered by exercise, regulation of phosphate provision likely does not contribute to the well-established intensity-dependent shift in substrate utilization. Mitochondrial sensitivity to PC and P-CoA were not influenced by exercise, while M-CoA sensitivity was attenuated similarly following LI and HI. In contrast, CPT-I sensitivity to L-carnitine was only altered following HI, as HI exercise attenuated L-carnitine sensitivity by ~40%. Moreover, modelling the in vivo concentrations of L-carnitine and P-CoA during exercise suggest that CPT-I flux is ~25% lower following HI, attributed equally to reductions in L-carnitine content and L-carnitine sensitivity. Altogether, these data further implicate CPT-I flux as a key event influencing metabolic interactions during exercise, as a decline in L-carnitine sensitivity in addition to availability at higher power outputs could impair mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation.
ยฉ2019 The Author(s). โข Keywords: CPT-I flux, Exercise, L-carnitine, Mitochondrial bioenergetics โข Bioblast editor: Plangger M โข O2k-Network Lab: CA Guelph Holloway GP
Labels: MiParea: Respiration, Exercise physiology;nutrition;life style
Organism: Mouse
Tissue;cell: Skeletal muscle
Preparation: Permeabilized tissue
Regulation: ADP, Phosphate, Substrate, Fatty acid Coupling state: LEAK, OXPHOS Pathway: F, N, NS HRR: Oxygraph-2k
2019-01