Tj. Barstow et al., CHANGES IN POTENTIAL CONTROLLERS OF HUMAN SKELETAL-MUSCLE RESPIRATIONDURING INCREMENTAL CALF EXERCISE, Journal of applied physiology, 77(5), 1994, pp. 2169-2176
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the consequences of nonlinea
r changes in phosphocreatine (PCr) and pH during incremental calf exer
cise on estimates of ADP and cytosolic free energy of ATP hydrolysis (
Delta G(ATP)). Six subjects performed incremental plantar flexion exer
cise on a treadle ergometer while muscle P-i metabolism (PCr, P-i, ATP
) and pH were followed using P-31-nuclear magnetic resonance spectrosc
opy. Changes in ADP and Delta G(ATP) were estimated with the assumptio
n that there was equilibrium of the creatine kinase reaction and homog
eneous tissue metabolite pools. All six subjects showed a threshold fo
r onset of cellular acidosis that occurred on average at 47.3 +/- 12.7
% of peak work rate (PWR). In five of the six subjects, PCr and P-i sh
owed accelerated rates of change above the threshold for onset of cell
ular acidosis. In all six subjects, ADP, when correctly calculated con
sidering changes in pH, rose in a curvilinear fashion that was well de
scribed by a Michaelis-Menten hyperbola through 60-100% of PWR, with a
mean apparent Michaelis-Menten constant of 43.1 +/- 17.1 mu M ADP and
a predicted maximal oxidative rate at PCr = 0, which was 241 +/- 94%
of PWR. Delta G(ATP) rose linearly with work rate from -62.9 +/- 1.8 k
J/mol during unloaded treadling to -55.0 +/- 1.8 kJ/mol at PWR. If we
assume a linear O-2 uptake-to-work rate relationship, these results ar
e most consistent with control of respiration being exerted through De
lta G(ATP) under these conditions (incremental exercise by human calf
muscle). These data suggest that the changes in PCr (and ultimately ch
anges in ADP as well) with increasing work rate reflect shifts in subs
trate concentrations that are dictated and/or required under changing
acid-base conditions by the linear rise in Delta G(ATP).