Abstract

31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements of pH and the concentrations of orthophosphate and phosphocreatine were used to estimate rates of glycogenolytic and oxidative ATP synthesis in rat leg muscle during 6 min sciatic nerve stimulation at different rates (1-4 Hz). To study the regulation of glycogenolysis during exercise, the apparent 'glycogenolytic capacity' (L(MAX)) was calculated from glycogenolytic ATP synthesis rate and orthophosphate concentration as a measure of the Ca2+-dependent activation of glycogen phosphorylase. This was found to be proportional to the total ATP synthesis rate (F), and to decline with time; expressed relative to total ATP turnover rate as L(MAX)/F, its initial value was 2.9+/-0.6, declining with half-time 1.4+/-0.4 min. The apparent 'mitochondrial capacity' (Q(MAX)), calculated from oxidative ATP synthesis rate and [ADP], was independent of ATP turnover rate, but increased with half-time 0.8+/-0.1 min to 29+/-2 mmol kg(-1) min(-1): thus [ADP] was the predominant but not the only influence on oxidative ATP synthesis. Numerical simulation shows that time-dependent changes in L(MAX)/F exert a strong influence on pH and on the concentrations of phosphocreatine and ADP.

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