Abstract

Endurance athlete performance is greatly dependent on sufficient post-race system recovery, as endurance races have substantial physiological, immunological and metabolic effects on these athletes. To date, the effects of numerous recovery modalities have been investigated, however, very limited literature exists pertaining to metabolic recovery of athletes after endurance races without the utilisation of recovery modalities. As such, this investigation is aimed at identifying the metabolic recovery trend of athletes within 48 h after a marathon. Serum samples of 16 athletes collected 24 h before, immediately after, as well as 24 h and 48 h post-marathon were analysed using an untargeted two-dimensional gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry metabolomics approach. The metabolic profiles of these comparative time-points indicated a metabolic shift from the overall post-marathon perturbed state back to the pre-marathon metabolic state during the recovery period. Statistical analyses of the data identified 61 significantly altered metabolites including amino acids, fatty acids, tricarboxylic acid cycle, carbohydrates and associated intermediates. These intermediates recovered to pre-marathon related concentrations within 24 h post-marathon, except for xylose which only recovered within 48 h. Furthermore, fluctuations in cholesterol and pyrimidine intermediates indicated the activation of alternative recovery mechanisms. Metabolic recovery of the athletes was attained within 48 h post-marathon, most likely due to reduced need for fuel substrate catabolism. This may result in the activation of glycogenesis, uridine-dependent nucleotide synthesis, protein synthesis, and the inactivation of cellular autophagy. These results may be beneficial in identifying more efficient, targeted recovery approaches to improve athletic performance.

Highlights

  • Endurance athlete performance is greatly dependent on sufficient post-race system recovery, as endurance races have substantial physiological, immunological and metabolic effects on these athletes

  • Metabolic recovery is thought to proceed in a biphasic manner with the initial phase mainly consisting of rapid oxygen, ATP and phosphocreatine replenishment, whereas the second phase entails the slow restoration of innate metabolism a­ daptations[2,3]

  • Considering that the metabolome provides a direct depiction of the physiological state of an organism at a specific point in ­time[4], metabolomics is a formidable tool when investigating the effects of endurance races on the human body, as well as the recovery thereof

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Summary

Introduction

Endurance athlete performance is greatly dependent on sufficient post-race system recovery, as endurance races have substantial physiological, immunological and metabolic effects on these athletes. Considering the current lack of literature regarding the metabolic recovery of marathon athletes over an extended period (48 h), an untargeted two-dimensional gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GCxGC-TOFMS) serum metabolomics approach was used to investigate the unaided (without the ingestion and/or utilisation of recovery modalities) metabolic recovery (to baseline-related concentrations) of 16 marathon athletes within 48 h post-marathon These results might improve the current knowledge pertaining to the consequence of endurance activity and the time-course of recovery in the days following the event, as well as lead to the identification of new or additional recovery pathways and/or more targeted, perhaps even personalised, recovery approaches

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