The time-course of creatine mediated augmentation of skeletal muscle glycogen storage following exhaustive exercise in man

University of Cambridge (2004) J Physiol 555P, C59

Communications: The time-course of creatine mediated augmentation of skeletal muscle glycogen storage following exhaustive exercise in man

Paul A. Roberts, John Fox, Simon W. Jones, Nicholas Peirce, Anna Casey and Paul L. Greenhaff

The Centre for Integrated Systems Biology & Medicine, School of Biomedical Sciences, Queen's Medical Centre, University of Nottingham and *QinetiQ Centre for Human Sciences, Farnborough, UK

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Muscle glycogen availability is a determinant of endurance exercise performance and its depletion results in fatigue. We have demonstrated that 5 days of creatine (Cre; 20g/day) and simple carbohydrate (CHO) ingestion augmented muscle glycogen storage following exhaustive exercise in man when compared to CHO feeding alone (Robinson et al. 1999). This study characterises the time-course of this Cre-induced glycogen super-compensatory response, and points to mechanisms underpinning this phenomenon.

Fourteen recreationally-trained males (age 26.4 ± 2.0 years, BMI 24.5 ± 1.0, Î{special}J{special},max 44.4 ± 1.5 ml kg-1 min-1) participated in this study, which was approved by the local Ethics Committee. Subjects reported fasted to the laboratory, whereupon they underwent a 2 h oral-glucose tolerance test (GTT, 90 g CHO; blood sampling every 15 min for serum insulin analysis). Following GTT, subjects exercised at 70 % Î{special}J{special},max on a cycle ergometer until exhaustion. Following exercise, a muscle biopsy sample was obtained from the subject’s non-dominant leg (Exhaustion). Subjects were then randomly assigned to a Cre (n = 7) or glycine (placebo, n = 7) treatment group and ingested 5 g of Cre or 5 g of glycine dissolved in 250 ml of a warm sugar-free solution followed by 500 ml of a CHO-containing solution (90 g simple sugars). Subjects continued to ingest these solutions, at equally spaced intervals, on 4 occasions per day over 6 days. A high CHO diet (37.5 kcal kg-1 day-1, >80 % calorific intake CHO) was provided and ingested during the supplementation period. Subjects reported fasted to the laboratory on days 1, 3 and 6 of supplementation for further GTTs and muscle biopsy sampling from their non-dominant leg. Muscle samples were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen, freeze dried and used for subsequent biochemical analysis (Table 1). Data are expressed as means ± S.E.M. Statistical analysis was performed using two-way ANOVA with LSD post-hoc analysis.

The present study unequivocally establishes Cre’s glycogen super-compensatory properties and shows that this marked response occurs within 24-hours post-exercise, during which the muscle total-Cre stores had increased < 10 %. Furthermore, Cre augments muscular glycogen stores independent of any clear increase in serum insulin AUC (area under the curve) during 6 days of supplementation, which points towards some other mechanism as being causative.

This work was carried out as part of the Chemical Biological Defence & Human Sciences Domain of the UK MoD Corporate Research Programme



Where applicable, experiments conform with Society ethical requirements.

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