Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise
Two healthy men with high working capacities were injected intravenously with palmitate-1-14C and NaH14CO3 on two occasions while they were performing strenuous exercise on a bicycle ergometer. From analysis of 14CO2 in expired air after injection of NaH14CO3, rate constants and compartment sizes de...
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doaj-1118e4c1436749568d2f75caf90308552021-04-23T06:11:36ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751967-07-0184366373Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exerciseRichard J. Havel0Lars-Göran Ekelund1Alf Holmgren2Department of Clinical Physiology and the King Gustav V Research Institute, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; Cardiovascular Research Institute and the Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94122Department of Clinical Physiology and the King Gustav V Research Institute, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; Cardiovascular Research Institute and the Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94122Department of Clinical Physiology and the King Gustav V Research Institute, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; Cardiovascular Research Institute and the Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94122Two healthy men with high working capacities were injected intravenously with palmitate-1-14C and NaH14CO3 on two occasions while they were performing strenuous exercise on a bicycle ergometer. From analysis of 14CO2 in expired air after injection of NaH14CO3, rate constants and compartment sizes describing a three-compartment system for CO2 were determined algebraically. These data were combined with those of a separate study in which 14C in free fatty acids of arterial blood plasma and in expired CO2 were measured after injection of palmitate-1-14C to construct an eight-compartment model with an analogue computer that described precisely the observed data in each subject.The results indicate that under these conditions almost half of the free fatty acids leaving the blood are oxidized directly (i.e., are transferred to mitochondrial oxidative sites through small intermediate compartments). The remainder enters larger compartments apart from the direct pathway; most of this fraction reenters the direct oxidative pathway within 30 min. These observations suggest that certain esterified fatty acids contained in working muscle cells are rapidly renewed.Recycling of 14C in plasma free fatty acids and triglyceride fatty acids was substantially reduced during exercise. Values for turnover rate and extent of oxidation of free fatty acids obtained by the method of continuous intravenous infusion of palmitate-1-14C were similar during exercise in these two subjects to those obtained after pulse injection.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520395687free fatty acidsenergy metabolismfat metabolismtriglyceride metabolismcompartmental analysis |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Richard J. Havel Lars-Göran Ekelund Alf Holmgren |
spellingShingle |
Richard J. Havel Lars-Göran Ekelund Alf Holmgren Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise Journal of Lipid Research free fatty acids energy metabolism fat metabolism triglyceride metabolism compartmental analysis |
author_facet |
Richard J. Havel Lars-Göran Ekelund Alf Holmgren |
author_sort |
Richard J. Havel |
title |
Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
title_short |
Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
title_full |
Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
title_fullStr |
Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
title_full_unstemmed |
Kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14C in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
title_sort |
kinetic analysis of the oxidation of palmitate-1-14c in man during prolonged heavy muscular exercise |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Journal of Lipid Research |
issn |
0022-2275 |
publishDate |
1967-07-01 |
description |
Two healthy men with high working capacities were injected intravenously with palmitate-1-14C and NaH14CO3 on two occasions while they were performing strenuous exercise on a bicycle ergometer. From analysis of 14CO2 in expired air after injection of NaH14CO3, rate constants and compartment sizes describing a three-compartment system for CO2 were determined algebraically. These data were combined with those of a separate study in which 14C in free fatty acids of arterial blood plasma and in expired CO2 were measured after injection of palmitate-1-14C to construct an eight-compartment model with an analogue computer that described precisely the observed data in each subject.The results indicate that under these conditions almost half of the free fatty acids leaving the blood are oxidized directly (i.e., are transferred to mitochondrial oxidative sites through small intermediate compartments). The remainder enters larger compartments apart from the direct pathway; most of this fraction reenters the direct oxidative pathway within 30 min. These observations suggest that certain esterified fatty acids contained in working muscle cells are rapidly renewed.Recycling of 14C in plasma free fatty acids and triglyceride fatty acids was substantially reduced during exercise. Values for turnover rate and extent of oxidation of free fatty acids obtained by the method of continuous intravenous infusion of palmitate-1-14C were similar during exercise in these two subjects to those obtained after pulse injection. |
topic |
free fatty acids energy metabolism fat metabolism triglyceride metabolism compartmental analysis |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520395687 |
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