AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are investigating how exercise training influences potassium (K) regulation in skeletal muscles, which is crucial for physical function and linked to diseases like type II diabetes and hypertension.
  • The review focuses on various molecular factors affecting K regulation, such as Na,K-ATPase function, oxygen levels, and signaling proteins, and discusses different types of exercise and their effects on muscle adaptation.
  • The findings could guide future exercise programs and pharmacological strategies aimed at improving K regulation and overall physical health.

Article Abstract

Despite substantial progress made towards a better understanding of the importance of skeletal muscle K regulation for human physical function and its association with several disease states (eg type-II diabetes and hypertension), the molecular basis underpinning adaptations in K regulation to various stimuli, including exercise training, remains inadequately explored in humans. In this review, the molecular mechanisms essential for enhancing skeletal muscle K regulation and its key determinants, including Na ,K -ATPase function and expression, by exercise training are examined. Special attention is paid to the following molecular stressors and signaling proteins: oxygenation, redox balance, hypoxia, reactive oxygen species, antioxidant function, Na ,K , and Ca concentrations, anaerobic ATP turnover, AMPK, lactate, and mRNA expression. On this basis, an update on the effects of different types of exercise training on K regulation in humans is provided, focusing on recent discoveries about the muscle fibre-type-dependent regulation of Na ,K -ATPase-isoform expression. Furthermore, with special emphasis on blood-flow-restricted exercise as an exemplary model to modulate the key molecular mechanisms identified, it is discussed how training interventions may be designed to maximize improvements in K regulation in humans. The novel insights gained from this review may help us to better understand how exercise training and other strategies, such as pharmacological interventions, may be best designed to enhance K regulation and thus the physical function in humans.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/apha.13196DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

exercise training
16
skeletal muscle
12
molecular stressors
8
regulation
8
improvements regulation
8
muscle regulation
8
physical function
8
molecular mechanisms
8
regulation humans
8
exercise
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!