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  3. Hypoxia refines plasticity of mitochondrial respiration to repeated muscle work.
 

Hypoxia refines plasticity of mitochondrial respiration to repeated muscle work.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.44034
Official URL
http://rdcu.be/ytCg
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s00421-013-2783-8
PubMed ID
24327174
Description
PURPOSE

We explored whether altered expression of factors tuning mitochondrial metabolism contributes to muscular adaptations with endurance training in the condition of lowered ambient oxygen concentration (hypoxia) and whether these adaptations relate to oxygen transfer as reflected by subsarcolemmal mitochondria and oxygen metabolism in muscle.

METHODS

Male volunteers completed 30 bicycle exercise sessions in normoxia or normobaric hypoxia (4,000 m above sea level) at 65% of the respective peak aerobic power output. Myoglobin content, basal oxygen consumption, and re-oxygenation rates upon reperfusion after 8 min of arterial occlusion were measured in vastus muscles by magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Biopsies from vastus lateralis muscle, collected pre and post a single exercise bout, and training, were assessed for levels of transcripts and proteins being associated with mitochondrial metabolism.

RESULTS

Hypoxia specifically lowered the training-induced expression of markers of respiratory complex II and IV (i.e. SDHA and isoform 1 of COX-4; COX4I1) and preserved fibre cross-sectional area. Concomitantly, trends (p < 0.10) were found for a hypoxia-specific reduction in the basal oxygen consumption rate, and improvements in oxygen repletion, and aerobic performance in hypoxia. Repeated exercise in hypoxia promoted the biogenesis of subsarcolemmal mitochondria and this was co-related to expression of isoform 2 of COX-4 with higher oxygen affinity after single exercise, de-oxygenation time and myoglobin content (r ≥ 0.75). Conversely, expression in COX4I1 with training correlated negatively with changes of subsarcolemmal mitochondria (r < -0.82).

CONCLUSION

Hypoxia-modulated adjustments of aerobic performance with repeated muscle work are reflected by expressional adaptations within the respiratory chain and modified muscle oxygen metabolism.
Date of Publication
2014-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Desplanches, Dominique
Amami, Myriam
Dupré-Aucouturier, Sylvie
Valdivieso, Paola
Schmutz, Silvia
Institut für Anatomie, Funktionelle Anatomie
Müller, Matthias
Institut für Anatomie, Funktionelle Anatomie
Hoppeler, Hans-Heinrich
Institut für Anatomie
Kreis, Rolandorcid-logo
DIPR, Magnetresonanz-Spektroskopie und Methodologie (AMSM)
Flück, Martin
Institut für Anatomie, Funktionelle Anatomie
Additional Credits
Institut für Anatomie, Funktionelle Anatomie
Institut für Anatomie
DIPR, Magnetresonanz-Spektroskopie und Methodologie (AMSM)
Series
European journal of applied physiology
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
1439-6319
Access(Rights)
open.access
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