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Regulation of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase during recovery from high-intensity exercise in the rat

journal contribution
posted on 1997-02-15, 00:00 authored by Lambert BrauLambert Brau, L Ferreira, S Nikolovski, G Raja, T Palmer, P Fournier
The aim of this study was to determine the role of the phosphorylation state of glycogen synthase and glycogen phosphorylase in the regulation of muscle glycogen repletion in fasted animals recovering from high-intensity exercise. Groups of rats were swum to exhaustion and allowed to recover for up to 120 min without access to food. Swimming to exhaustion caused substantial glycogen breakdown and lactate accumulation in the red, white and mixed gastrocnemius muscles, whereas the glycogen content in the soleus muscle remained stable. During the first 40 min of recovery, significant repletion of glycogen occurred in all muscles examined except the soleus muscle. At the onset of recovery, the activity ratios and fractional velocities of glycogen synthase in the red, white and mixed gastrocnemius muscles were higher than basal, but returned to pre-exercise levels within 20 min after exercise. In contrast, after exercise the activity ratios of glycogen phosphorylase in the same muscles were lower than basal, and increased to pre-exercise levels within 20 min. This pattern of changes in glycogen synthase and phosphorylase activities, never reported before, suggests that the integrated regulation of the phosphorylation state of both glycogen synthase and phosphorylase might be involved in the control of glycogen deposition after high-intensity exercise.

History

Journal

Biochemical journal

Volume

322

Issue

1

Pagination

303 - 308

Publisher

Portland Press

Location

London, England

ISSN

0264-6021

eISSN

1470-8728

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal