Publication | Open Access
Control of oxidative metabolism and oxygen delivery in human skeletal muscle: a steady-state analysis of the work/energy cost transfer function.
380
Citations
18
References
1985
Year
Oxidative MetabolismMuscle FunctionSteady-state AnalysisRedox BiologyMuscle PhysiologySteady StateSkeletal MuscleExerciseBioenergeticsApplied PhysiologyMetabolic StateHuman MetabolismInorganic PhosphateHealth SciencesBiochemistryMetabolic ControlMetabolomicsHuman PhysiologyEnergy MetabolismTransfer FunctionHuman Skeletal MuscleMetabolic DiseasePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyTissue OxygenationMetabolismMedicine
The concept of transfer function for organ performance (work output vs. biochemical input) is developed for skeletal and cardiac muscle under steady-state exercise conditions. For metabolic control by the ADP concentration, the transfer function approximates a Michaelis-Menten hyperbola. Variation of the work identifies metabolic operating points on the transfer function corresponding to ADP concentrations or to a ratio of inorganic phosphate to phosphocreatine that can be determined by phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance. This operating point is characterized by the fraction (V/Vmax) of maximal activity of oxidative metabolism in the steady state. This quantity appears to be useful in predicting the degree to which metabolic homeostasis is effective; poorly controlled metabolic states can readily be identified and are used in the diagnosis and therapy of metabolic disease in the organs of neonates and adults.
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