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. 1982 Aug;41(10):2686-91.

Effect of exercise on protein metabolism in humans as explored with stable isotopes

  • PMID: 6809497

Effect of exercise on protein metabolism in humans as explored with stable isotopes

D J Millward et al. Fed Proc. 1982 Aug.

Abstract

Exercising for 3.75 h on a treadmill at 50% VO2 max in the fed state induced an increased excretion of 71 mg nitrogen/kg over the 18 h after exercise. However, measurements of the time course of changes in 13CO2 excretion from ingested [1-13C]leucine indicated that all of this increased nitrogen production occurs during the exercise period. Because of the reduced renal clearance and slow turnover of the urea pool, urea excretion lags behind urea production. Measurements of nitrogen flux from the plateau labeling of urinary ammonia achieved by repeated oral doses of 15N-labeled glycine indicated that the nitrogen loss resulted from an increase in protein degradation and a decrease in protein synthesis. Further studies with [1-13C]leucine indicated that a 2-h treadmill exercise induced an increase in the nitrogen loss from 5.4 to 16 mg . kg-1 . h-1 measured with a primed constant infusion of [1-13C]leucine. This resulted from a fall in whole-body protein synthesis. Glucose given at the rate of 0.88 g . kg-1 . h-1 depressed the rate of whole-body protein degradation and appeared to suppress the exercise-induced increase in nitrogen excretion. When leucine oxidation rates were measured at increasing work rates, a linear relationship between percentage of VO2 max and leucine oxidation was observed up to 89% VO2 max when 54% of the flux of leucine was oxidized. These changes may involve nonmuscle as well as muscle tissue. Thus the source of the increased nitrogen losses is probably liver. In muscle, protein degradation is actually decreased judged by methylhistidine excretion, whereas in liver, protein degradation may be increased. Also the fall in whole-body protein synthesis may reflect changes in nonmuscle tissues because in running rats protein synthesis in muscle is maintained. As far as leucine metabolism is concerned, because the increase in leucine oxidation occurs when leucine and its keto acid concentration falls, exercise must specifically activate the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase.

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