A single day of bed rest, irrespective of energy balance, does not affect skeletal muscle gene expression or insulin sensitivity
Dirks, ML; Stephens, FB; Jackman, SR; et al.Gordo, J; Machin, D; Pulsford, R; van Loon, L; Wall, B
Date: 18 April 2018
Journal
Experimental Physiology
Publisher
Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The initial metabolic and molecular events that underpin disuse-induced skeletal muscle deconditioning, and the contribution of energy balance, remain to be investigated. Ten young, healthy males (age: 25 ± 1 y; BMI: 25.3 ± 0.8 kg m-2 ) underwent three 24 h laboratory-based experimental periods in a randomized, crossover manner: 1) ...
The initial metabolic and molecular events that underpin disuse-induced skeletal muscle deconditioning, and the contribution of energy balance, remain to be investigated. Ten young, healthy males (age: 25 ± 1 y; BMI: 25.3 ± 0.8 kg m-2 ) underwent three 24 h laboratory-based experimental periods in a randomized, crossover manner: 1) controlled habitual physical activity with an energy-balanced diet (CON); 2) strict bed rest with a diet to maintain energy balance (BR-B); and 3) strict bed rest with a diet identical to CON, consequently resulting in positive energy balance. Continuous glucose monitoring was performed throughout each visit, with vastus lateralis muscle biopsies and an oral glucose tolerance test performed before and after. In parallel with muscle samples collected from a previous 7-day bed rest study, biopsies were used to examine expression of genes associated with the regulation of muscle mass and insulin sensitivity. A single day of bed rest, irrespective of energy balance, did not lead to overt changes in whole-body substrate oxidation, indices of insulin sensitivity (i.e. HOMA-IR (BR-B: from 2.7 ± 1.7 to 3.1 ± 1.5, P > 0.05), Matsuda (BR-B: from 5.9 ± 3.3 to 5.2 ± 2.9, P > 0.05)), or 24 h glycaemic control/variability compared to CON. Seven days of bed rest led to ∼30-55% lower expression of genes involved in insulin signalling, lipid storage/oxidation, and muscle protein breakdown, whereas no such changes were observed after one day of bed rest. In conclusion, more than one day of physical inactivity is required to observe the insulin resistance and robust skeletal muscle transcriptional responses associated with bed rest and consequent alterations in energy balance.
Sport and Health Sciences
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