Article
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Citation
Wardle SL, Macnaughton LS, McGlory C, Witard OC, Dick JR, Whitfield PD, Ferrando AA, Wolfe RR, Kim I, Hamilton DL, Moran CN, Tipton KD & Galloway SD (2020) Human skeletal muscle metabolic responses to 6 days of high-fat overfeeding are associated with dietary n-3PUFA content and muscle oxidative capacity. Physiological Reports, 8 (16), Art. No.: e14529. https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14529
Abstract
Understanding human physiological responses to high-fat energy excess (HFEE) may help combat the development of metabolic disease. We aimed to investigate the impact of manipulating the n-3PUFA content of HFEE diets on whole-body and skeletal muscle markers of insulin sensitivity. Twenty healthy males were overfed (150% energy, 60% fat, 25% carbohydrate, 15% protein) for 6 d. One group (n=10) received 10% of fat intake as n-3PUFA rich fish oil (HF-FO), and the other group consumed a mix of fats (HF-C). Oral glucose tolerance tests with stable isotope tracer infusions were conducted before, and following, HFEE, with muscle biopsies obtained in basal and insulin-stimulated states for measurement of membrane phospholipids, ceramides, mitochondrial enzyme activities, and PKB and AMPK¦Á2 activity. Insulin sensitivity and glucose disposal did not change following HFEE, irrespective of group. Skeletal muscle ceramide content increased following HFEE (8.5¡À1.2 to 12.1¡À1.7 nmol¡¤mg-1, P=0.03), irrespective of group. No change in mitochondrial enzyme activity was observed following HFEE, but citrate synthase activity was inversely associated with increases in ceramide content (r=-0.52, P=0.048). A time by group interaction was observed for PKB activity (P=0.003), with increased activity following HFEE in HF-C (4.5¡À13.0 mU¡¤mg-1) and decreased activity in HF-FO (-10.1¡À20.7mU¡¤mg-1) following HFEE. Basal AMPK¦Á2 activity increased in HF-FO (4.1¡À0.6 to 5.3¡À0.7 mU¡¤mg-1, P=0.049), but did not change in HF-C (4.6¡À0.7 to 3.8¡À0.9 mU¡¤mg-1) following HFEE. We conclude that early skeletal muscle signalling responses to HFEE appear to be modified by dietary n-3PUFA content, but the potential impact on future development of metabolic disease needs exploring.
Keywords
exercise; fish oil; insulin resistance; omega©\3; overfeeding; type 2 diabetes
Journal
Physiological Reports: Volume 8, Issue 16
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Publication date | 31/08/2020 |
Publication date online | 26/08/2020 |
Date accepted by journal | 27/07/2020 |
URL | |
eISSN | 2051-817X |
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