4.6 Article

Exercise Induces Different Molecular Responses in Trained and Untrained Human Muscle

期刊

MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE
卷 52, 期 8, 页码 1679-1690

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002310

关键词

MUSCLE MEMORY; mTORC1; PGC1 alpha; E3 LIGASES

资金

  1. Swedish National Centre for Research in Sports [2016-0134]
  2. Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences
  3. Early Career Research Fellowship from the Swedish National Centre for Research in Sports [D2017-0012]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Introduction Human skeletal muscle is thought to have heightened sensitivity to exercise stimulus when it has been previously trained (i.e., it possesses muscle memory). We investigated whether basal and acute resistance exercise-induced gene expression and cell signaling events are influenced by previous strength training history. Methods Accordingly, 19 training naive women and men completed 10 wk of unilateral leg strength training, followed by 20 wk of detraining. Subsequently, an acute resistance exercise session was performed for both legs, with vastus lateralis biopsies taken at rest and 1 h after exercise in both legs (memory and control). Results The phosphorylation of AMPK(Thr172)and eEF2(Thr56)was higher in the memory leg than that in the control leg at both time points. The postexercise phosphorylation of 4E-BP1(Thr46 and Ser65)was higher in the memory leg than that in the control leg. The memory leg had lower basal mRNA levels of total PGC1 alpha and, unlike the control leg, exhibited increases in PGC1 alpha-ex1a transcripts after exercise. In the genes related to myogenesis (SETD3,MYOD1, andMYOG), mRNA levels differed between the memory and the untrained leg; these effects were evident primarily in the male subjects. Expression of the novel geneSPRYD7was lower in the memory leg at rest and decreased after exercise only in the control leg, but SPRYD7 protein levels were higher in the memory leg. Conclusion In conclusion, several key regulatory genes and proteins involved in muscular adaptations to resistance exercise are influenced by previous training history. Although the relevance and mechanistic explanation for these findings need further investigation, they support the view of a molecular muscle memory in response to training.

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