Abstract

Key points Protein ingestion and cooling are strategies employed by athletes to improve postexercise recovery and, as such, to facilitate muscle conditioning. However, whether cooling affects postprandial protein handling and subsequent muscle protein synthesis rates during recovery from exercise has not been assessed.We investigated the effect of postexercise cooling on the incorporation of dietary protein‐derived amino acids into muscle protein and acute postprandial (hourly) as well as prolonged (daily) myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during recovery from resistance‐type exercise over 2 weeks.Cold‐water immersion during recovery from resistance‐type exercise lowers the capacity of the muscle to take up and/or direct dietary protein‐derived amino acids towards de novo myofibrillar protein accretion. In addition, cold‐water immersion during recovery from resistance‐type exercise lowers myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during prolonged resistance‐type exercise training.Individuals aiming to improve skeletal muscle conditioning should reconsider applying cooling as a part of their postexercise recovery strategy. We measured the impact of postexercise cooling on acute postprandial (hourly) as well as prolonged (daily) myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during adaptation to resistance‐type exercise over 2 weeks. Twelve healthy males (aged 21 ± 2 years) performed a single resistance‐type exercise session followed by water immersion of both legs for 20 min. One leg was immersed in cold water (8°C: CWI), whereas the other leg was immersed in thermoneutral water (30°C: CON). After water immersion, a beverage was ingested containing 20 g of intrinsically (l‐[1‐13C]‐phenylalanine and l‐[1‐13C]‐leucine) labelled milk protein with 45 g of carbohydrates. In addition, primed continuous l‐[ring‐2H5]‐phenylalanine and l‐[1‐13C]‐leucine infusions were applied, with frequent collection of blood and muscle samples to assess myofibrillar protein synthesis rates in vivo over a 5 h recovery period. In addition, deuterated water (2H2O) was applied with the collection of saliva, blood and muscle biopsies over 2 weeks to assess the effects of postexercise cooling with protein intake on myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during more prolonged resistance‐type exercise training (thereby reflecting short‐term training adaptation). Incorporation of dietary protein‐derived l‐[1‐13C]‐phenylalanine into myofibrillar protein was significantly lower in CWI compared to CON (0.016 ± 0.006 vs. 0.021 ± 0.007 MPE; P = 0.016). Postexercise myofibrillar protein synthesis rates were lower in CWI compared to CON based upon l‐[1‐13C]‐leucine (0.058 ± 0.011 vs. 0.072 ± 0.017% h−1, respectively; P = 0.024) and l‐[ring‐2H5]‐phenylalanine (0.042 ± 0.009 vs. 0.053 ± 0.013% h−1, respectively; P = 0.025). Daily myofibrillar protein synthesis rates assessed over 2 weeks were significantly lower in CWI compared to CON (1.48 ± 0.17 vs. 1.67 ± 0.36% day−1, respectively; P = 0.042). Cold‐water immersion during recovery from resistance‐type exercise reduces myofibrillar protein synthesis rates and, as such, probably impairs muscle conditioning.

Highlights

  • Author names for PubMed indexing: Fuchs, Kouw, Churchward-Venne, Smeets, Senden, van Marken Lichtenbelt, Verdijk, van Loo

  • The fractional synthesis rate (FSR) of myofibrillar protein was calculated by dividing the increment in enrichment in the product by the enrichment of the respective precursor enrichments (Holwerda et al 2018)

  • We assessed the impact of postexercise cooling on postprandial myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during recovery from resistance-type exercise

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Summary

Introduction

Resistance-type exercise training is an effective strategy for increasing skeletal muscle mass and strength. Current guidelines for protein intake after lower body resistance-type exercise recommend the ingestion of 20 g (or 0.3 g kg–1 body mass) of a high quality protein source after exercise in healthy, young males (Moore et al 2009; Witard et al 2014; Moore, 2019) Another strategy frequently applied by athletes to support postexercise skeletal muscle conditioning is cold-water immersion (CWI). In line with our first hypothesis, we hypothesized that postexercise cooling lowers myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during 2 weeks of resistance-type exercise training in healthy, young men. We combined contemporary stable isotope tracer methodology with the ingestion of produced intrinsically (L-[1-13C]phenylalanine and L-[1-13C]-leucine) labelled milk protein to assess the acute effects of postexercise cooling on the incorporation of dietary protein-derived amino acids into muscle protein and postprandial myofibrillar protein synthesis rates during 5 h of postexercise recovery. We applied oral deuterated water-dosing methodology to determine the impact of combining postexercise cooling with protein intake on myofibrillar protein synthesis rates assessed over a 2 week exercise-training period

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