Regional glucose uptake and protein synthesis in isolated perfused rat hearts immediately after training and later

Abstract
Summary The effect of 10 weeks of running training and termination of training on the regional distribution of cardiac glucose uptake and protein synthesis were studied in isolated perfused hearts in male rats. The left ventricular glucose uptake in hearts from sedentary rats was 1.87±0.14 μmol/min per g protein (mean ± SE), being about 30% higher in the subendocardial than in the subepicardial layer (p<0.05). The gradient of left ventricular glucose uptake was similar to the controls in the rats retired from training, but was absent in the trained animals. The altered transmural glucose uptake probably reflects differences in the adaptive response of various myocardial muscle layers to a long-term intermittent increase in cardiac work load. Phenylalanine incorporation was evenly distributed through the left ventricle in all the groups, but was lowered in the left and right ventricles of the trained rats. Phenylalanine incorporation returned to the control level 5 weeks after the cessation of training.