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Hydroxytyrosol modifies skeletal muscle GLUT4/AKT/Rac1 axis in trained rats

Authors

CASUSO PÉREZ, RAFAEL, Al Fazazi, Saad , Ruiz-Ojeda, Francisco J. , Plaza-Diaz, Julio , Rueda-Robles, Ascension , Aragon-Vela, Jeronimo , Huertas, Jesus R.

External publication

Si

Means

J. Cell. Physiol.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

6.513

SJR Impact

1.308

Publication date

01/01/2021

ISI

000540196300001

Abstract

Training induces a number of healthy effects including a rise in skeletal muscle (SKM) glucose uptake. These adaptations are at least in part due to the reactive oxygen species produced within SKM, which is in agreement with the notion that antioxidant supplementation blunts some training-induced adaptations. Here, we tested whether hydroxytyrosol (HT), the main polyphenol of olive oil, would modify the molecular regulators of glucose uptake when HT is supplemented during exercise. Rats were included into sedentary and exercised (EXE) groups. EXE group was further divided into a group consuming a low HT dose (0.31 mg center dot kg center dot d; EXElow), a moderate HT dose (4.61 mg center dot kg center dot d; EXEmid), and a control group (EXE). EXE raised glucose transporter type 4 (GLUT4) protein content, Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (Rac1) activity, and protein kinase b (AKT) phosphorylation in SKM. Furthermore, EXElow blunted GLUT4 protein content and AKT phosphorylation while EXEmid showed a downregulation of the GLUT4/AKT/Rac1 axis. Hence, a low-to-moderate dose of HT, when it is supplemented as an isolated compound, might alter the beneficial effect of training on basal AKT phosphorylation and Rac1 activity in rats.

Keywords

antioxidants; exercise; glucose; polyphenols; skeletal muscle

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