Abbreviations: Acetyl-CoA carboxylase, ACC; AMP-activated protein kinase, AMPK; peptide YY 3-36, PYY 3-36 ;Key words: AMP-activated protein kinase, energy metabolism, exercise, hypothalamus Hypothalamic AMPK and exercise; Andersson et al.
AbstractRecent studies have demonstrated that AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in the hypothalamus is involved in the regulation of food intake. Because exercise is known to influence appetite and causes substrate depletion it may also influence AMPK in the hypothalamus. Male rats either rested or ran for 30 or 60 min on a treadmill (22m/min, 10% slope) and were sacrificed immediately after exercise or after 60 min recovery either in the fasted state or after oral gavage with glucose (3g/kg body weightbw). Exercise decreased muscle and liver glycogen substantially.Hypothalamic total or α2-associated AMPK activity and phosphorylation state of the AMPK substrate acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) were not changed significantly immediately following treadmill running or during fed or fasted recovery. Plasma grehlin increased (p<0.05) by 40% during exercise whereas the concentration of PYY was unchanged. In recovery, glucose feeding increased plasma glucose and insulin concentrations whereas grehlin and PYY decreased to (grehlin) or below (PPY) resting levels. It is concluded that 1 h of strenuous exercise in rats does not elicit significant changes in hypothalamic AMPK activity despite an increase in plasma ghrelin. Thus, changes in energy metabolism during or after exercise are likely not coordinated by changes in hypothalamic AMPK activity.
Hypothalamic AMPK and exercise; Andersson et al.3