Enzyme mechanisms for pyruvate-to-lactate flux attenuation: a study of Sherpas, Quechuas, and hummingbirds

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Enzymmechanismen zur Daempfung des Pyruvat-zu-Laktat-Wandels: eine Untersuchung an Sherpas, Bewohnern von Quechua und Kolibris
Autor:Hochachka, P.W.; Stanley, C.; McKenzie, D.C.; Villena, A.; Monge, C.
Erschienen in:International journal of sports medicine
Veröffentlicht:13 (1992), Suppl.1, S. S119-S122, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0172-4622, 1439-3964
Schlagworte:
MDH
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199304061965
Quelle:BISp

Abstract

During incremental exercise to fatigue under hypobaric hypoxia, Andean Quechua natives form and accumulate less plasma lactate than do lowlanders under similar conditions. This phenomenon of low lactate accumulation despite hypobaric hypoxia, first discovered some half century ago, is known in Quechuas to be largely unaffected by acute exposure to hypoxia or by acclimatization to sea level conditions. Earlier Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and metabolic biochemistry studies suggest that closer coupling of energy demand and energy supply in Quechuas allows given changes in work rate with relatively modest changes in muscle adenylate and phosphagen concentrations, thus tempering the activation of glycolytic flux to pyruvate - a coarse control mechanism operating at the level of overall pathway flux. Later studies of enzyme activities in skeletal muscles of Quechuas and of Sherpas have identified a finely-tuned control mechanism which by adaptive modifications of a few key enzymes apparently serves to specifically attenuate pyruvate flux to lactate. Verf.-Referat