Publication | Open Access
Training-induced adaptation of oxidative phosphorylation in skeletal muscles
50
Citations
29
References
2003
Year
Muscle FunctionKinesiologyBiochemistrySkeletal MuscleExercisePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyQuantitative AnalysisApplied PhysiologyStrength TrainingTraining-induced AdaptationExercise ScienceMetabolismMitochondrial ProteinsOxygen-uptake KineticsHealth Sciences
Muscle training/conditioning improves the adaptation of oxidative phosphorylation in skeletal muscles to physical exercise. However, the mechanisms underlying this adaptation are still not understood fully. By quantitative analysis of the existing experimental results, we show that training-induced acceleration of oxygen-uptake kinetics at the onset of exercise and improvement of ATP/ADP stability due to physical training are mainly caused by an increase in the amount of mitochondrial proteins and by an intensification of the parallel activation of ATP usage and ATP supply (increase in direct stimulation of oxidative phosphorylation complexes accompanying stimulation of ATP consumption) during exercise.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1