Oxidative muscles contain more free fatty acids than glycolytic muscles, which could explain in part their higher sensitivity to oxidation. These fatty acids are partly the result of phospholipid hydrolysis catalysed by phospholipases A and lysophospholipases. Up to now, very little is known on the
Observation and quantitation of lactate in oxidative and glycolytic fibers of skeletal muscles
β Scribed by Dee Shen; Carl D. Gregory; M. Joan Dawson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 993 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
In ^1^H NMR spectroscopic studies of fatiguing skeletal muscles, two peaks consistently arise near 1.3 ppm, typically 15β20 Hz apart at 300 MHz. From a variety of NMR and biochemical evidence, both peaks are identified as lactate. Both the CH~3~ and CH protons of lactate experience the same shift in intact muscle; this rules out chemical bonding or complexation. The ratio of intensity of the two methyl peaks varies with muscle type and suggests a correlation with oxidative and glycolytic fiber populations. The shift can be accounted for by the presence of paramagnetic myoglobin in the oxidative fibers. Phantom studies, as well as oxygen, temperature, field, and orientation dependence of the muscle spectra are all consistent with an explanation based upon bulk magnetic susceptibility. It is concluded that the two lactate peaks represent separate contributions from glycolytic and oxidative muscle fibers.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Double quantum (DQ), J-resolved (1)H NMR spectra from rat and bovine skeletal muscle showed a splitting frequency ( approximately 24 Hz) for the lactate methyl protons that varied with the orientation of the muscle fibers relative to the magnetic field. In contrast, spectra of lactate in solution co