Abstract

Transmembrane lactate movements are mediated by monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs), but these proteins have never been characterized in rainbow trout. Our goals were to clone potential trout MCTs, determine tissue distribution, and quantify the effects of exhausting exercise on MCT expression. Such information could prove important to understand the mechanisms underlying the classic "lactate retention" seen in trout white muscle after intense exercise. Four isoforms were identified and partially characterized in rainbow trout: MCT1a, MCT1b, MCT2, and MCT4. MCT1b was the most abundant in heart and red muscle but poorly expressed in the gill and brain where MCT1a and MCT2 were prevalent. MCT expression was strongly stimulated by exhausting exercise in brain (MCT2: +260%) and heart (MCT1a: +90% and MCT1b: +50%), possibly to increase capacity for lactate uptake in these highly oxidative tissues. By contrast, the MCTs of gill, liver, and muscle remained unaffected by exercise. This study provides a possible functional explanation for postexercise "lactate retention" in trout white muscle. Rainbow trout may be unable to release large lactate loads rapidly during recovery because: 1) they only poorly express MCT4, the main lactate exporter found in mammalian glycolytic muscles; 2) the combined expression of all trout MCTs is much lower in white muscle than in any other tissue; and 3) exhausting exercise fails to upregulate white muscle MCT expression. In this tissue, carbohydrates act as an "energy spring" that alternates between explosive power release during intense swimming (glycogen to lactate) and recoil during protracted recovery (slow glycogen resynthesis from local lactate).

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