Our laboratory recently reported that chronic resistance training (RT) improved insulin-stimulated glucose transport in normal rodent skeletal muscle, owing, in part, to increased GLUT-4 protein concentration (Yaspelkis BB III, Singh MK, Trevino B, Krisan AD, and Collins DE. Acta Physiol Scand 175: 315-323, 2002). However, it remained to be determined whether these improvements resulted from alterations in the insulin signaling cascade as well. In addition, the possibility existed that RT might improve skeletal muscle insulin resistance. Thirty-two male Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to four groups: control diet (Con)-sedentary (Sed); Con-RT; high-fat diet (HF)-Sed; and HF-RT. Animals consumed their respective diets for 9 wk; then RT animals performed 12 wk of training (3 sets, 10 repetitions at 75% one-repetition maximum, 3x/wk). Animals remained on their dietary treatments over the 12-wk period. After the training period, animals were subjected to hindlimb perfusions. Insulin-stimulated insulin receptor substrate-1-associated phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase activity was enhanced in the red gastrocnemius and quadriceps of Con-RT and HF-RT animals. Atypical PKC-zeta/lambda and Akt activities were reduced in HF-Sed and normalized in HF-RT animals. Resistance training increased GLUT-4 protein concentration in red gastrocnemius and quadriceps of Con-RT and HF-RT animals. No differences were observed in total protein concentrations of insulin receptor substrate-1, Akt, atypical PKC-zeta/lambda, or phosphorylation of Akt. Collectively, these findings suggest that resistance training increases insulin-stimulated carbohydrate metabolism in normal skeletal muscle and reverses high-fat diet-induced skeletal muscle insulin resistance by altering components of both the insulin signaling cascade and glucose transporter effector system.
Leptin administration improves skeletal muscle insulin responsiveness in diet-induced insulin-resistant rats. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 280: E130-E142, 2001.-In addition to suppressing appetite, leptin may also modulate insulin secretion and action. Leptin was administered here to insulin-resistant rats to determine its effects on secretagogue-stimulated insulin release, whole body glucose disposal, and insulin-stimulated skeletal muscle glucose uptake and transport. Male Wistar rats were fed either a normal (Con) or a high-fat (HF) diet for 3 or 6 mo. HF rats were then treated with either vehicle (HF), leptin (HF-Lep, 10 mg ⅐ kg Ϫ1 ⅐ day Ϫ1 sc), or food restriction (HF-FR) for 12-15 days. Glucose tolerance and skeletal muscle glucose uptake and transport were significantly impaired in HF compared with Con. Whole body glucose tolerance and rates of insulinstimulated skeletal muscle glucose uptake and transport in HF-Lep were similar to those of Con and greater than those of HF and HF-FR. The insulin secretory response to either glucose or tolbutamide (a pancreatic -cell secretagogue) was not significantly diminished in HF-Lep. Total and plasma membrane skeletal muscle GLUT-4 protein concentrations were similar in Con and HF-Lep and greater than those in HF and HF-FR. The findings suggest that chronic leptin administration reversed a high-fat diet-induced insulin-resistant state, without compromising insulin secretion.ob gene product; high-fat diet; glucose tolerance; glucose uptake and transport; GLUT-4 protein LEPTIN, THE PRODUCT of the ob gene (62), has received a great deal of attention since its discovery in 1994, due to the ability of this 16-kDa protein hormone to reduce visceral adipose deposition (21,37). This biological activity is important from a public health perspective, as increases in visceral fat have been associated with "insulin resistance syndrome" or Syndrome X (39). Attenuation of insulin resistance will decrease the incidence of metabolic abnormalities such as hypertriglyceridemia, reduced high-density lipoproteins, elevated apolipoprotein B levels, and hypertension. Furthermore, reduced visceral fat deposition may also prevent the development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes (17).It is believed that leptin exerts its primary effect by acting on receptors in the hypothalamus, possibly via inhibition of neuropeptide Y release (47). However, leptin receptor isoforms are expressed in tissues other than the hypothalamus (12, 29, 51), and insulin action (e.g., phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity, skeletal muscle glucose uptake and transport) is improved in these tissues after leptin treatment (3,56,57,60). Improvements in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal after chronic leptin administration were initially demonstrated by Barzilai et al. (3) and Sivitz et al. (44). Barzilai et al. (3) reported that 8 days of leptin treatment increased whole body glucose uptake in SpragueDawley rats as assessed by the euglycemic clamp technique. In an extension to these findings, we (60) found that 14...
The aim of this investigation was to determine if resistance training exercise improved glucose uptake and transport in rodent skeletal muscle. Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to one of the three groups: control (CON), resistance trained (RT) and aerobic exercise trained (AT). Resistance trained rats were placed in a rodent squat apparatus and performed three sets of 10 repetitions at 75% of their one repetition maximum 3 days week-1 for 12 weeks. Aerobic exercise training consisted of running the rats 3 days week-1 for 45 min over a 12-week period on a motor-driven treadmill (32 m min-1, 15% grade). Following the training period, all animals were subjected to hind limb perfusion in the presence of 500 microU mL-1 insulin. Hind limb glucose uptake was similar in the RT (9.91 +/- 0.7 micromol g-1 h-1) and AT (10.23 +/- 1.0 micromol g-1 h-1) animals and significantly greater than control (CON) (6.40 +/- 0.6 micromol g-1 h-1). Rates of 3-O-methyl-d-glucose transport in the RT animals were elevated in the muscles utilized for RT while in the AT animals rates of 3-O-methyl-d-glucose transport were increased in those muscles recruited for running. The increased rates of 3-O-methyl-d-glucose transport in the skeletal muscles of the resistance trained and aerobic exercise trained animals appeared to be, in part, because of an increased GLUT4 protein concentration. These findings suggest that both resistance or aerobic training exercise can improve insulin-stimulated skeletal muscle glucose uptake and transport, but the training adaptations are restricted to the muscles recruited for the exercise performance.
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