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Artikel des Monats
Altered Fiber Distribution and Fiber-Specific
Glycolytic and Oxidative Enzyme Activity in Skeletal Muscle of
Patients With Type 2 Diabetes
Andreas Oberbach1,2, Yvonne Bossenz2, Stefanie
Lehmann2, Josef Niebauer, MD, PHD3, Volker Adams, PHD4, Ralf
Paschke, MD5, Michael R. Schön, MD6, Matthias Blüher,
MD2,5 and Karla Punkt, PHD1
1 Institute of Anatomy, University of Leipzig, Germany
2 Junior Research Group N03, Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical
Research (IZKF) Leipzig, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany
3 Institute of Sports Medicine, Paracelsus Private Medical University,
Salzburg, Austria
4 Heart Center, Department of Cardiology, University of Leipzig,
Leipzig, Germany
5 Department of Medicine III, University of Leipzig, Germany
6 Department of Surgery, University of Leipzig, Germany
Diabetes Care 29:895-900, 2006
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—We investigated whether alterations of glycolytic
and oxidative enzyme capacity in skeletal muscle of patients
with type 2 diabetes pertain to specific muscle fibers and are
associated with changes in muscle fiber composition.
RESEARCH DESIGN
AND METHODS—Vastus lateralis muscle was
obtained by percutaneous biopsy from 10 patients with type 2
diabetes and 15 age- and BMI-matched healthy volunteers. Using
cytophotometry, muscle fiber composition and fiber type–specific
glycolytic and oxidative enzyme activities were measured in slow
oxidative, fast oxidative glycolytic, and fast glycolytic fibers.
RESULTS—In
the whole muscle, oxidative activity was decreased in patients
with type 2 diabetes. The slow oxidative fiber fraction was reduced
by 16%, whereas the fast glycolytic fiber fraction was increased
by 49% in skeletal muscle from the diabetic patients. Both oxidative
and glycolytic enzyme activities were significantly increased
in fast glycolytic and fast oxidative glycolytic fibers of type
2 diabetic patients. However, the fiber-specific ratio of glycolytic
enzyme activity relative to oxidative activity was not different
between type 2 diabetic patients and the control subjects. The
myofibrillic ATP activity was significantly lower in all fiber
types of patients with type 2 diabetes and correlates with glucose
infusion rate during the steady state of a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic
clamp and maximal aerobic capacity and negatively with HbA1c
values.
CONCLUSIONS—Reduced oxidative enzyme activity in
muscle of type 2 diabetic patients is most likely due to a reduction
in slow oxidative fibers. Increased glycolytic and oxidative
enzyme activities in individual muscle fibers are closely related
to measures of long-term glycemic control and whole-body insulin
sensitivity and could therefore represent a compensatory mechanism
of the muscle in function of the altered glucose metabolism
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