Abstract

The glycolytic product of exercise, lactate, has long been recognized to promote lipid accumulation by activation of G-protein-coupled receptor 81 (GPR81) and inhibition of the cyclic adenosine monophosphate-protein kinase A (cAMP –PKA) pathway in adipose tissue. Whether lactate causes a similar process in skeletal muscle is unclear. Lactate might also improve mitochondria content in skeletal muscle; however, the mechanism is not clarified either. In this study, using intramuscular injection of lactate to the gastrocnemius and intraperitoneal injection of forskolin (activator of cAMP-PKA pathway), we identified the role of the cAMP-PKA pathway in lactate-induced intramuscular triglyceride accumulation and mitochondrial content increase. The intramuscular triglyceride level in the gastrocnemius increased after 5weeks of lactate injection (p<0.05), and this effect was blocked by forskolin injection (p<0.05). Corresponding expression level changes of GPR81, P-PKA/PKA, P-CREB/cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB), and proteins related to lipid metabolism suggest that lactate could induce intramuscular triglyceride accumulation partly through the inhibition of the cAMP-PKA pathway. Meanwhile, the intramuscular expression of citrate synthase (CS) and the activity of CS increased after 5weeks of lactate injection (p<0.05), but the change of CS expression was not blocked by forskolin injection, suggesting other mechanisms might exist. Consequently, exploration for other potential mechanisms that might contribute to the lactate-induced mitochondria content increase was conducted. We found an increase in the contents of lactate-related metabolites in skeletal muscle mitochondria after acute lactate injection (the p-value of each analysis is less than 0.05). LHDA was also validated to exist in mitochondria in this study. These results provide a possibility for metabolism-related mechanisms of lactate-induced mitochondria content increase. Future study is needed to validate this hypothesis. In conclusion, lactate-induced intramuscular triglyceride accumulation is achieved by inhibition of lipolysis, and this process is regulated by the cAMP-PKA pathway. Promoted lipogenesis also contributes to lactate-induced triglyceride accumulation, and this process might also be regulated by the cAMP-PKA pathway. Lactate injection might increase mitochondria content and cAMP-PKA pathway might have a limited contribution, while other metabolism-related mechanisms might play a prominent role.

Highlights

  • Lactate has long been recognized to promote lipid accumulation in adipocytes

  • We have previously reported that lactate contributed to intramuscular triglyceride accumulation and mitochondria adaption in rats

  • The role of cAMP-PKA pathway in lactateinduced lipid accumulation in adipose tissue has been widely reported in previous studies (Sakurai et al, 2014)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Infusion of lactate has been reported to suppress lipolysis in adipose tissue (Gold et al, 1963; Bjorntorp, 1965; Houghton et al, 1971; Boyd et al, 1974; De Pergola et al, 1989; Cai et al, 2008) This effect of lactate is known to be correlated with the activation of its receptor G-proteincoupled receptor 81 (GPR81) and the inhibition of its downstream cAMP-PKA pathway in adipose tissue (Sakurai et al, 2014). Using intramuscular injection of lactate to the gastrocnemius and intraperitoneal injection of forskolin (activator of cAMP-PKA pathway), we investigated the role of the cAMP-PKA pathway in lactate-induced intramuscular lipid accumulation and mitochondria content increase. Other possible mechanisms of increased mitochondria content after lactate injection were explored from the aspect of energy metabolism

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