Skeletal muscle glucose uptake during treadmill exercise in neuronal nitric oxide synthase-μ knockout mice

Author:

Hong Yet Hoi123,Yang Christine4,Betik Andrew C.12,Lee-Young Robert S.4,McConell Glenn K.12

Affiliation:

1. College of Health and Biomedicine, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;

2. Clinical Exercise Science Program, Institute of Sport, Exercise and Active Living, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;

3. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; and

4. Cellular and Molecular Metabolism, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Nitric oxide influences intramuscular signaling that affects skeletal muscle glucose uptake during exercise. The role of the main NO-producing enzyme isoform activated during skeletal muscle contraction, neuronal nitric oxide synthase-μ (nNOSμ), in modulating glucose uptake has not been investigated in a physiological exercise model. In this study, conscious and unrestrained chronically catheterized nNOSμ+/+ and nNOSμ−/− mice either remained at rest or ran on a treadmill at 17 m/min for 30 min. Both groups of mice demonstrated similar exercise capacity during a maximal exercise test to exhaustion (17.7 ± 0.6 vs. 15.9 ± 0.9 min for nNOSμ+/+ and nNOSμ−/−, respectively, P > 0.05). Resting and exercise blood glucose levels were comparable between the genotypes. Very low levels of NOS activity were detected in skeletal muscle from nNOSμ−/− mice, and exercise increased NOS activity only in nNOSμ+/+ mice (4.4 ± 0.3 to 5.2 ± 0.4 pmol·mg−1·min−1, P < 0.05). Exercise significantly increased glucose uptake in gastrocnemius muscle (5- to 7-fold) and, surprisingly, more so in nNOSμ−/− than in nNOSμ+/+ mice ( P < 0.05). This is in parallel with a greater increase in AMPK phosphorylation during exercise in nNOSμ−/− mice. In conclusion, nNOSμ is not essential for skeletal muscle glucose uptake during exercise, and the higher skeletal muscle glucose uptake during exercise in nNOSμ−/− mice may be due to compensatory increases in AMPK activation.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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