Abstract

Phase-modulated rotating-frame imaging (p.m.r.f.i.), a localization technique for 31P-n.m.r. spectroscopy, has been applied to obtain information on the heterogeneity of phosphorus-containing metabolites and pH in the skeletal muscle of control and streptozotocin-diabetic rats. Using this method, the metabolic changes in four spatially resolved longitudinal slices (where slice I is superficial and slice IV is deep muscle) through the ankle flexor muscles have been investigated at rest and during steady-state isometric twitch-contraction at 2 Hz. At rest, intracellular pH was lower, and phosphocreatine (PCr)/ATP was higher, throughout the muscle mass in diabetic compared with control animals. The change in PCr/ATP in diabetic muscle correlated with a decrease in the chemically determined ATP concentration. During the muscle stimulation period, the decrease in pH observed in diabetic muscle at rest was maintained, but not exacerbated, by the contractile stimulus. Stimulation of muscle contraction caused more marked changes in PCr/(PCr + Pi), PCr/ATP and Pi/ATP in the diabetic group. These changes were most evident in slice III, which contains the greatest proportion of fast glycolytic-oxidative (type IIa) fibres, in which statistically significant differences were observed for all metabolite ratios. The results presented suggest that some degree of heterogeneity occurs in diabetic skeletal muscle in vivo with respect to the extent of metabolic dysfunction caused by the diabetic insult and that regions of the muscle containing high proportions of type IIa fibres appear to be most severely affected.

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