Abstract

This study examined the effect of changes in body temperature during exercise on signal transduction-related glucose uptake in the skeletal muscle of type 2 diabetic rats. Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty rats (25 weeks of age), which have type 2 diabetes, were divided into the following four weight-matched groups; control (CON, n = 6), exercised under warm temperature (WEx, n = 8), exercised under cold temperature (CEx, n = 8), and heat treatment (HT, n = 6). WEx and CEx animals were subjected to running on a treadmill at 20 m/min for 30 min under warm (25°C) or cold (4°C) temperature. HT animals were exposed to single heat treatment (40–41°C for 30 min) in a heat chamber. Rectal and muscle temperatures were measured immediately after exercise and heat treatment, and the gastrocnemius muscle was sampled under anesthesia. Rectal and muscle temperatures increased significantly in rats in the WEx and HT, but not the CEx, groups. The phosphorylation levels of Akt, AS160, and TBC1D1 (Thr590) were significantly higher in the WEx and HT groups than the CON group (p < 0.05). In contrast, the phosphorylation levels of AMP-activated protein kinase, ACC, and TBC1D1 (Ser660) were significantly higher in rats in the WEx and CEx groups than the CON group (p < 0.05) but did not differ significantly between rats in the WEx and CEx groups. Body temperature elevation by heat treatment did not activate the AMPK signaling. Our data suggest that body temperature elevation during exercise is essential for activating the Akt signaling pathway in the skeletal muscle of rats with type 2 diabetic rats.

Highlights

  • Insulin resistance plays a key role in the development of lifestyle diseases, including obesity and type 2 diabetes

  • We reported previously that exercise training without body temperature elevation blunts the improvement in insulin resistance in type 2 diabetic rats [4], suggesting that body temperature elevation during exercise may be important for improving insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes

  • To evaluate the effects of body temperature elevation per se on signal transduction, HT animals were exposed to single heat treatment (40–41 ̊C for 30 min) in a heat chamber (TVG321AA, Advantec, Tokyo, Japan) without anesthesia, followed by 5 h fasting

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Summary

Methods

Male Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were obtained from Japan SLC (Shizuoka, Japan). OLETF rats are a wellcharacterized animal model of human type 2 diabetes. OLETF rats exhibit hyperphagia and obesity beginning during early childhood and go on to develop insulin resistance and type 2. Body temperature and Akt signaling diabetes [19]. All animals were housed with 12:12-h light-dark cycle in an environment-controlled room (23 ± 1 ̊C, 55 ± 5% relative humidity) and given standard rat chow and water ad libitum. At 25 weeks of age, OLETF rats (612.6 ± 30.7 g) were divided into four body weightmatched groups: control (CON; n = 6), exercised under warm temperature (WEx; n = 8), exercised under cold temperature (CEx; n = 8), and heat treatment (HT; n = 6)

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