Lactate metabolism during exercise in patients with mitochondrial myopathy.

Neuromuscul Disord

Neuromuscular Research Unit, Section 3342, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: August 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with mitochondrial DNA mutations experience high plasma lactate levels both at rest and during exercise, raising questions about whether this is due to increased production or impaired oxidation of lactate.
  • A study involving 10 patients with mtDNA mutations and 10 healthy controls found that during exercise, the patients had significantly higher lactate concentrations and production rates, but their muscles oxidized lactate at a rate comparable to healthy individuals.
  • The findings indicate that, despite mitochondrial dysfunction, lactate serves as an important energy source for muscles, suggesting it is not merely a sign of impaired oxidative capacity but a crucial fuel for metabolism.

Article Abstract

Patients with mitochondrial DNA mutations often have elevated plasma lactate at rest and during exercise, but it is unknown whether the high lactate levels are caused by a high production, an impaired oxidation or a combination. We studied lactate kinetics in 10 patients with mtDNA mutations and 10 matched healthy control subjects at rest and during cycle exercise with a combination of femoral arterio-venous differences of lactate, and lactate tracer dilution methodology. During exercise, lactate concentration and production rates were several-fold higher in patients, but despite mitochondrial dysfunction, lactate was oxidized in muscle to the same extent as in healthy control subjects. This surprisingly high ability to burn lactate in working muscle with defective mitochondria, probably relates to the variability of oxidative capacity among muscle fibers. The data suggests that lactate is not solely an indicator of impaired oxidative capacity, but an important fuel for oxidative metabolism, even in muscle with severely impaired mitochondrial function.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2013.05.007DOI Listing

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