Pa. Fournier et H. Guderley, GLUCOSIDIC PATHWAYS OF GLYCOGEN BREAKDOWN AND GLUCOSE-PRODUCTION BY MUSCLE FROM POSTEXERCISED FROGS, The American journal of physiology, 265(5), 1993, pp. 180001141-180001147
Muscle and body glucose in frogs increases markedly during the initial
hour of recovery after strenuous exercise. The liver is not the major
source responsible for this accumulation. This is indicated by the st
ability of liver glycogen levels after exercise and by the observation
that hepatectomized and normal frogs accumulate similar amounts of gl
ucose in their muscles and body during recovery. The renal contributio
n cannot account for this increase in body glucose. Most of the glucos
e that accumulates in the body after exercise has a muscular origin, a
s indicated by the facts that two-thirds of the body glucose is found
in muscle and that the intracellular levels of muscle glucose are much
higher than those of the plasma. The glucose that accumulates outside
muscle may also have a muscular origin. The glucosidic pathways of gl
ycogen breakdown are the only metabolic avenue with sufficient capacit
y to account for the amount of glucose accumulated in muscle during th
e first hour of recovery. These results indicate that the ability of a
n isolated preparation of frog muscle to liberate glucose during recov
ery from exercise (Fournier et al. J. Biol. Chem. 267: 8234-8238, 1992
) is not an artifactual metabolic curiosity but rather a metabolic rea
lity that takes place in vivo. Glucose accumulation during recovery is
thought to facilitate the metabolic transition of frog carbohydrate m
etabolism from a catabolic state, characteristic of exercise, to an an
abolic one.