Acute exercise increases insulin sensitivity in adult sheep: a new preclinical model

Author:

McConell Glenn K.12,Kaur Gunveen1,Falcão-Tebas Filippe1,Hong Yet H.12,Gatford Kathryn L.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Sport, Exercise and Active Living, College of Sport and Exercise Science, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;

2. College of Health and Biomedicine, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; and

3. Robinson Research Institute and School of Paediatrics and Reproductive Health, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

Abstract

In healthy humans and rodents, chronic and acute exercise improves subsequent insulin sensitivity of skeletal muscle. A large animal species with similar metabolic responses to exercise would permit longitudinal studies, including repeated biopsies of muscle and other tissues not possible in rodents, and enable study of interactions with insulin-resistant physiological states not feasible in humans. Therefore, we examined whether acute exercise increases insulin sensitivity in adult sheep. Insulin sensitivity was measured by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp (HEC) in mature female sheep ( n = 7). Sheep were familiarized to treadmill walking and then performed an acute exercise bout (30 min, 8% slope, up to 4.4 km/h). A second HEC was conducted ∼18 h after the acute exercise. Musculus semimembranosus biopsies were obtained before and after each HEC. Glucose infusion rate during the HEC increased 40% ( P = 0.003) and insulin sensitivity (glucose infusion rate/plasma insulin concentration) increased 32% ( P = 0.028) after acute exercise. Activation of proximal insulin signaling in skeletal muscle after the HEC, measured as Ser473 phosphorylation of Akt, increased approximately five-fold in response to insulin ( P < 0.001) and was unaltered by acute exercise performed 18 h earlier. PGC and GLUT4 protein, glycogen content and citrate synthase activity in skeletal muscle did not change in response to insulin or exercise. In conclusion, improved insulin sensitivity and unchanged proximal insulin signaling on the day after acute exercise in sheep are consistent with responses in humans and rodents, suggesting that the sheep is an appropriate large-animal model in which to study responses to exercise.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia

Collaborative Research Network

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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