Skeletal muscle -6 and regulation of liver metabolism during high-fat diet and exercise training

Abstract

Altres ajuts: The study was supported by grants from the Lundbeck Foundation, The Danish Research Foundation, The Danish Council for Independent Research in the Natural Sciences, and The Augustinus Foundation. Centre of Inflammation and Metabolism (CIM) is supported by a grant from the Danish National Research Foundation (#02-512-55).Interleukin ()-6 is released from skeletal muscle (SkM) during exercise and has been shown to affect hepatic metabolism. It is, however, unknown whether SkM -6 is involved in the regulation of exercise training-induced counteraction of changes in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in the liver in response to high-fat diet () feeding. Male SkM-specific -6 () and Floxed mice were subjected to Chow diet, or combined with exercise training ( ExTr) for 16 weeks. Hepatic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase () protein content decreased with both and ExTr in Floxed mice, but increased in -6 mice on . In addition, the intrahepatic glucose concentration was in -6 mice higher in than chow. Within ExTr mice, hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) 36 a protein content was higher in -6 than Floxed mice. Hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase () 4 and 2 protein content was in Floxed mice lower in ExTr than Chow. In addition, hepatic 1-phosphorylation was higher and 1 protein lower in . Together this suggests that SkM -6 regulates hepatic glucose metabolism, but does not seem to be of major importance for the regulation of oxidative capacity or lipogenesis in liver during or combined with exercise training

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