4.6 Article

Impaired exercise-induced mitochondrial biogenesis in the obese Zucker rat, despite PGC-1α induction, is due to compromised mitochondrial translation elongation

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00671.2013

Keywords

peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1 alpha mitochondrial; protein synthesis; mitochondrial transcription and translation; oxidative metabolism

Funding

  1. Sydney and J. L. Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance
  2. Texas Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine

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Previously, we demonstrated that high-volume resistance exercise stimulates mitochondrial protein synthesis (a measure of mitochondrial biogenesis) in lean but not obese Zucker rats. Here, we examined factors involved in regulating mitochondrial biogenesis in the same animals. PGC-1 alpha was 45% higher following exercise in obese but not lean animals compared with sedentary counterparts. Interestingly, exercised animals demonstrated greater PPAR delta protein in both lean (47%) and obese (> 200%) animals. AMPK phosphorylation (300%) and CPT-I protein (30%) were elevated by exercise in lean animals only, indicating improved substrate availability/flux. These findings suggest that, despite PGC-1 alpha induction, obese animals were resistant to exercise-induced synthesis of new mitochondrial and oxidative protein. Previously, we reported that most anabolic processes are upregulated in these same obese animals regardless of exercise, so the purpose of this study was to assess specific factors associated with the mitochondrial genome as possible culprits for impaired mitochondrial biogenesis. Exercise resulted in higher mRNA contents of mitochondrial transcription factor A (similar to 50% in each phenotype) and mitochondrial translation initiation factor 2 (31 and 47% in lean and obese, respectively). However, mitochondrial translation elongation factor-Tu mRNA was higher following exercise in lean animals only (40%), suggesting aberrant regulation of mitochondrial translation elongation as a possible culprit in impaired mitochondrial biogenesis following exercise with obesity.

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