Effects of high-intensity swimming training on GLUT-4 and glucose transport activity in rat skeletal muscle
1 Department of Physiology and Biomechanics, National Institute of Fitness and Sports, Kanoya, Kagoshima 891-2393; 2 Division of Health Promotion and 3 Clinical Nutrition, National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Shinjuku Tokyo, 162-8636 Japan; and 4 Department of Medicine, Washington Univers...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2001-06, Vol.90 (6), p.2019-2024 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1 Department of Physiology and Biomechanics, National
Institute of Fitness and Sports, Kanoya, Kagoshima 891-2393;
2 Division of Health Promotion and 3 Clinical
Nutrition, National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Shinjuku
Tokyo, 162-8636 Japan; and 4 Department of Medicine,
Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
This study was performed to assess the effects of short-term,
extremely high-intensity intermittent exercise training on the GLUT-4
content of rat skeletal muscle. Three- to four-week-old male
Sprague-Dawley rats with an initial body weight ranging from 45 to 55 g
were used for this study. These rats were randomly assigned to an 8-day
period of high-intensity intermittent exercise training (HIT),
relatively high-intensity intermittent prolonged exercise training
(RHT), or low-intensity prolonged exercise training (LIT). Age-matched
sedentary rats were used as a control. In the HIT group, the rats
repeated fourteen 20-s swimming bouts with a weight equivalent to 14, 15, and 16% of body weight for the first 2, the next 4, and the last 2 days, respectively. Between exercise bouts, a 10-s pause was allowed.
RHT consisted of five 17-min swimming bouts with a 3-min rest between
bouts. During the first bout, the rat swam without weight, whereas
during the following four bouts, the rat was attached to a weight
equivalent to 4 and 5% of its body weight for the first 5 days and the
following 3 days, respectively. Rats in the LIT group swam 6 h/day for
8 days in two 3-h bouts separated by 45 min of rest. In the first experiment, the HIT, LIT, and control rats were compared. GLUT-4 content in the epitrochlearis muscle in the HIT and LIT groups after
training was significantly higher than that in the control rats by 83 and 91%, respectively. Furthermore, glucose transport activity,
stimulated maximally by both insulin (2 mU/ml) (HIT: 48%, LIT: 75%)
and contractions (25 10-s tetani) (HIT: 55%, LIT: 69%), was higher in
the training groups than in the control rats. However, no significant
differences in GLUT-4 content or in maximal glucose transport activity
in response to both insulin and contractions were observed between the
two training groups. The second experiment demonstrated that GLUT-4
content after HIT did not differ from that after RHT (66% higher in
trained rats than in control). In conclusion, the present investigation
demonstrated that 8 days of HIT lasting only 280 s elevated both
GLUT-4 content and maximal gluc |
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ISSN: | 8750-7587 1522-1601 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jappl.2001.90.6.2019 |