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The analysis of the skeletal muscle metabolism is crucial for designing optimal exercise paradigms in type 2 diabetes mellitus. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is linked to poor diet and lack of exercise, leading to insulin resistance, and personalized exercise programs may be more effective than standard ones for treatment.
  • A study involving various T2DM mouse models tested swimming-based exercise regimens tailored to their specific metabolic issues, revealing unique adaptations in muscle metabolism based on genetics and sex.
  • The findings suggested that these personalized exercises significantly improved metabolic health, reducing insulin resistance and enhancing glucose regulation in T2DM, highlighting the need for precision in exercise prescriptions for patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a chronic metabolic disease that commonly results from a high-calorie diet and sedentary lifestyle, leading to insulin resistance and glucose homeostasis perturbation. Physical activity is recommended as one first-line treatment in T2DM, but it leads to contrasted results. We hypothesized that, instead of applying standard exercise protocols, the prescription of personalized exercise programs specifically designed to reverse the potential metabolic alterations in skeletal muscle could result in better results.

Methods: To test this hypothesis, we drew the metabolic signature of the fast-twitch quadriceps muscle, based on a combined unbiased NMR spectroscopy and RT-qPCR study, in several T2DM mouse models of different genetic background (129S1/SvImJ, C57Bl/6J), sex and aetiology (high-fat diet (HFD) or HFD/Streptozotocin (STZ) induction or transgenic MKR (FVB-Tg Ckm-IGF1R*K1003R)1Dlr/J) mice. Three selected mouse models with unique muscular metabolic signatures were submitted to three different swimming-based programs, designed to address each metabolic specificity.

Results: We found that depending on the genetic background, the sex, and the mode of T2DM induction, specific muscular adaptations occurred, including depressed glycolysis associated with elevated PDK4 expression, shift to β-oxidation, or deregulation of amino-acid homeostasis. Interestingly, dedicated swimming-based exercises designed to restore specific metabolic alterations in muscle were found optimal in improving systemic T2DM hallmarks, including a significant reduction in insulin resistance, the improvement of glucose homeostasis, and a delay in sensorimotor function alterations.

Conclusion: The muscle metabolism constitutes an important clue for the design of precision exercises with potential clinical implications for T2DM patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11165837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s10020-024-00850-7DOI Listing

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