Abstract

The effects of aerobic exercise training, chronic administration of the selective beta 2-adrenergic agonist clenbuterol, and the combination of these two treatments on muscle insulin resistance were compared in female obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats. Rats were randomly assigned to trained, clenbuterol, clenbuterol-trained, or control groups. Training consisted of treadmill running for 2 h/day at 18 m/min up an 8% grade. Clenbuterol was administered by intubation (0.4-0.8 mg.kg body wt-1 x day-1) approximately 30 min before the rats ran each day. After 8 wk of treatment, muscle insulin resistance was assessed via hindlimb perfusion in the presence of 8 mM glucose and a submaximal (500 microU/ml) insulin concentration. Training increased citrate synthase activity (mumol.g wet wt-1 x min-1) by 32-74% and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by 45%. Clenbuterol ingestion induced a 17-29% increase in muscle mass but decreased citrate synthase activity by 34-42% and had no effect on muscle glucose uptake. Administration of clenbuterol to rats that exercise trained prevented the training-induced improvement in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and attenuated the increases in citrate synthase activity. In addition, both clenbuterol-treated groups displayed a 42% decrease in beta-adrenergic receptor density. The results indicate that clenbuterol administration, possibly through beta-adrenergic receptor downregulation, attenuated a cellular reaction essential for the exercise training-induced increase in citrate synthase activity and improvement in skeletal muscle insulin resistance of the obese Zucker rat.

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