Diabetes 56:2194-2200, 2007 DOI: 10.2337/db07-0020 © 2007 by the American Diabetes Association
Contraction Stimulates Nitric Oxide–Independent Microvascular Recruitment and Increases Muscle Insulin UptakeFrom the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, Virginia Address correspondence and reprint requests to Eugene J. Barrett, University of Virginia Health System, P.O. Box 801410, 450 Ray C. Hunt Dr., Charlottesville, VA 22908. E-mail: ejb8x{at}virginia.edu
Abbreviations:
AV, arteriovenous; CEU, contrast-enhanced ultrasound; EBD, Evans blue dye; FBF, femoral blood flow; L-NAME, N
We examined whether contraction-induced muscle microvascular recruitment would expand the surface area for insulin and nutrient exchange and thereby contribute to insulin-mediated glucose disposal. We measured in vivo rat hindlimb microvascular blood volume (MBV) using contrast ultrasound and femoral blood flow (FBF) using Doppler ultrasound in response to a stimulation frequency range. Ten minutes of 0.1-Hz isometric contraction more than doubled MBV (P < 0.05; n = 6) without affecting FBF (n = 7), whereas frequencies >0.5 Hz increased both. Specific inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase with N -L-nitro-arginine-methyl ester (n = 5) significantly elevated mean arterial pressure by 30 mmHg but had no effect on basal FBF or MBV. We next examined whether selectively elevating MBV without increasing FBF (0.1-Hz contractions) increased muscle uptake of albumin-bound Evans blue dye (EBD). Stimulation at 0.1 Hz (10 min) elicited more than twofold increases in EBD content (micrograms EBD per gram dry tissue) in stimulated versus contralateral muscle (n = 8; 52.2 ± 3.8 vs. 20 ± 2.5, respectively; P < 0.001). We then measured muscle uptake of EBD and 125I-labeled insulin (dpm per gram dry tissue) with 0.1-Hz stimulation (n = 6). Uptake of EBD (19.1 ± 3.8 vs. 9.9 ± 1; P < 0.05) and 125I-insulin (5,300 ± 800 vs. 4,244 ± 903; P < 0.05) was greater in stimulated muscle versus control. Low-frequency contraction increases muscle MBV by a NO-independent pathway and facilitates muscle uptake of albumin and insulin in the absence of blood flow increases. This microvascular response may, in part, explain enhanced insulin action in exercising skeletal muscle. Exercise reduces the risk of developing insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes and improves insulin sensitivity in insulin-resistant populations (1,2) through activation of a number of metabolic pathways in skeletal muscle. These include AMP-activated kinase (3,4), mitogen-activated protein kinase (5,6), Akt (7,8), and the p70s6k (9) pathways. These changes potentiate the effect of insulin to increase skeletal muscle glucose transport (10–13) and uptake (7,14), to increase fatty acid oxidation (15,16), and to increase mitochondrial activity (17,18). In healthy human volunteers, performing low-grade exercise during a euglycemic insulin clamp increases whole-body and leg glucose uptake to a greater extent than either insulin or exercise alone or even the sum of their individual effects (19). Although exercise clearly enhances insulin action on skeletal myocytes, studies suggest that the rate-limiting step to the metabolic actions of insulin in skeletal muscle is its transport from the vasculature to the muscle interstitium (20,21). The capillary endothelium is a physical barrier that macromolecules must cross to access muscle tissue. It is thought that insulin is transported in one or more ways, including passive diffusion (22,23), vesicular movement (24,25), and receptor-mediated transcytosis (26). Regardless of the mechanism of the transendothelial transport (TET) of insulin, it remains unknown whether exercise enhances the uptake of insulin to muscle, where it activates multiple metabolic pathways. Insulin increases muscle blood flow and induces microvascular recruitment in both humans (27–29) and animals (30–33). Both processes are inhibited by nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) blockade in rats (33). These insulin-induced increases in microvascular blood volume (MBV) expand endothelial surface area and may thereby facilitate the transfer of nutrients and macromolecules (like insulin) from the vasculature to muscle interstitium. Whether exercise recruits skeletal muscle microvasculature by a mechanism similar to insulin is unknown. Dawson et al. (34) examined microvascular recruitment in skeletal muscle in response to insulin or 2-Hz isometric skeletal muscle contraction and concluded that each can increase both MBV and total hindlimb femoral blood flow (FBF). Subsequently, Wheatley et al. (35) observed that in the obese Zucker rat, insulin-mediated recruitment is blunted, but 2-Hz hindlimb contraction still effectively recruits microvasculature. This suggests that exercise might recruit microvasculature via a mechanism that is distinct from that of insulin.
The 2-Hz stimulation frequency used in previous studies (34,35) increased FBF in addition to recruiting hindlimb microvasculature. In this study, we hypothesized (as had been suggested by Honig et al. [36] from analysis of tissue sections) that low-frequency contraction effectively increases skeletal muscle MBV without significantly increasing FBF. This would allow us to address the functional consequences of microvascular recruitment on the transfer of macromolecules from plasma into muscle tissue in vivo. We did this first using Evans blue dye (EBD), a tetrasodium diazo salt (molecular weight 980 Da) that rapidly and irreversibly (37) binds to albumin in a 10:1 molar ratio (38), and subsequently using I125-insulin as a tracer. In addition, we examined whether contraction-induced recruitment, changes in FBF, or muscle EBD uptake was affected by infusion of the NOS inhibitor N
Male Sprague-Dawley rats (200–250 g) were obtained from Charles River Laboratories (Wilmington, MA), housed at 22 ± 2°C with a 12:12-h light:dark cycle, and allowed free access to water and standard chow diet. Rats were fasted overnight before all experiments. The experimental protocols followed were approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Virginia.
Surgical procedures.
Protocol 1: hindlimb microvascular recruitment and glucose uptake in response to electrical stimulation.
Protocol 2: muscle EBD uptake in response to low-frequency contraction.
Protocol 3: muscle 125I-labeled insulin and EBD muscle content in response to low-frequency contraction.
Immunohistochemistry and confocal imaging.
Statistical analysis.
Protocol 1: low-frequency electrical stimulation recruits capillaries by an NO-independent pathway without increasing FBF. In response to 10 min of isometric contraction at each of seven different frequencies, we observed a frequency-dependent increase in FBF in the saline-infused animals (n = 6). FBF was 0.53 ± 0.03 ml/min at baseline and did not change significantly (0.59 ± 0.05 ml/min at 0.05 Hz; 0.64 ± 0.06 ml/min at 0.1 Hz) at stimulation frequencies below 0.2 Hz in saline-infused animals (Fig. 1A). However, FBF increased threefold between 0.2 and 2 Hz (0.77 ± 0.06 and 2.4 ± 0.26 ml/min, respectively). There was likewise a frequency-dependent increase in FBF in the NOS-inhibited group (n = 5) despite the fact that L-NAME was infused beginning 30 min before and continuing throughout the period of electrical stimulation. MAP in the L-NAME group was 30 mmHg above (122 vs. 92) the saline group, indicating that L-NAME infusion effectively inhibited NOS (Fig. 1B). With this, there was a small (26 beats/min) decline in heart rate over 45 min that was not statistically significant (not shown). In these animals as well, FBF only rose significantly above baseline at a frequency of 0.5 Hz (1.95 ± 0.28 vs. 0.58 ± 0.05 ml/min; P < 0.05, repeated-measures ANOVA) and increased progressively at higher frequencies. FBF for the L-NAME group was significantly greater than the saline-infused animals at frequencies of 0.5 Hz and higher, resulting in a maximal 6.8-fold compared with a 3.6-fold increase over baseline at 2 Hz (Fig. 1A). Presumably, the higher systemic MAP contributed to this increase. Baseline hindlimb vascular resistance averaged 171.8 ± 15.4 mmHg · ml–1 · min–1 in the absence of L-NAME and 221.7 ± 29.8 mmHg · ml–1 · min–1 when L-NAME was infused (not shown). In response to electrical stimulation at 0.1 Hz, vascular resistance declined in both groups, and resistance declined further in both groups as stimulation frequency increased.
The frequency-dependent response for MBV (measured by CEU) was markedly different from that of FBF (Fig. 2A). There was a greater than twofold increase in MBV in saline-infused animals by 0.1 Hz when compared with baseline (15.5 ± 4.7 vs. 6.6 ± 1.8 video intensity units; P < 0.05). MBV only very modestly increased in response to further increases in frequency ( 30% increase from 0.1 to 2 Hz). The frequency-dependent response of MBV for the L-NAME group was indistinguishable from that of the saline-infused group despite the differences in FBF at contraction frequencies >0.5 Hz. Microvascular flow velocity (MFV) as estimated from the CEU replenishment curve indicated that there was no increase at contraction frequencies up to 0.1 Hz, and in the saline-infused animals, there was even a small decline (Fig. 2B). At stimulation frequencies >0.5 Hz, MFV significantly increased in both saline- and L-NAME–infused animals compared with baseline (P< 0.05) without a significant difference between the two treatment groups. Inasmuch as MBF is approximated by the product of MFV and MBV, these findings are in accord with the increases in FBF found at higher frequency contractions. Hindlimb glucose uptake did not increase in these studies until higher frequency stimulation, and there were no significant differences in glucose uptake between the L-NAME and saline treatment groups (2 Hz) (Fig. 2C).
These observations suggest that microvascular recruitment within skeletal muscle is stimulated by contraction and that the frequency dependence for recruitment of new microvessels is different than that for increases in total femoral flow. This may indicate that different mechanisms are responsible for these two vascular responses. Inhibition of NOS with L-NAME was without effect on contraction-induced recruitment. Clearly, L-NAME exerted a vascular action based on the observed increases in MAP compared with saline-treated animals (122.4 ± 5.7 vs. 90 ± 6 mmHg; P < 0.05) and the higher FBF seen with L-NAME.
Protocol 2: low-frequency stimulation enhances EBD uptake by skeletal muscle. In these studies, an intravenous bolus of EBD (25 mg/kg) circulated for 5 min before the onset of a 10-min bout of 0.1-Hz stimulation. Although separate muscle groups were isolated (soleus, tibialis, and gracilis) and analyzed, there were no significant differences in EBD content noted between fiber types, so data for EBD albumin were pooled from the 0.1 Hz–stimulated samples and compared with contralateral control. As shown in Fig. 3 for the saline group (n = 8), stimulation at a frequency of 0.1 Hz increased muscle EBD uptake 1.6-fold compared with the contralateral control leg (52.2 ± 3.8 vs. 20 ± 2.5 µg/g dry tissue; P < 0.001). Electrical stimulation likewise increased EBD content of the electrically stimulated compared with the contralateral hindleg in the L-NAME–treated group (n = 4). The muscle EBD content was modestly higher with L-NAME infusion in both the nonstimulated and stimulated legs when compared with the saline animals (P = 0.06). Again, as observed in protocol 1, the MAP was substantially elevated by the L-NAME infusion in animals studied under protocol 2 compared with saline-infused animals (139 ± 12 vs. 103.± 3 mmHg; P < 0.05), indicating successful inhibition of NOS by L-NAME.
Because EBD itself fluoresces red when excited with a 568-nm frequency laser light, frozen sections of skeletal muscle from both 0.1 Hz–stimulated and nonstimulated hindlimbs were imaged to visualize the location of EBD within the tissue. This was done to ascertain whether the increased tissue EBD content measured in 0.1 Hz–stimulated muscle was due to increased amounts of EBD remaining in the lumen of recruited microvessels or represented an increase in EBD taken into tissue. The vascular endothelium was immunostained with a PECAM-1 antibody. As shown in Fig. 4, the PECAM-1 antibody clearly stains the innermost layer of the vessel wall corresponding to the vascular endothelium. There is little colocalization of EBD with PECAM-1. However, the red fluorescence intensity within muscle fibers was substantially greater in the stimulated versus the nonstimulated skeletal muscle samples. The dye was primarily concentrated in the elastin-rich perimysium around the vasculature in nonstimulated muscle, whereas dye reached further into fiber bundles in the 0.1 Hz–stimulated muscle (data not shown).
Protocol 3: low-frequency stimulation increases muscle 125I-insulin content. Fig. 5 compares the skeletal muscle 125I-insulin content 5 min after intravenous injection of 1.5 µCi 125I-insulin in the electrically stimulated versus the lateral leg. Stimulation at 0.1 Hz significantly increased the tissue insulin content (5,299 ± 800 vs. 4,244 ± 903 dpm/g dry tissue; P < 0.05). In these animals, EBD was also infused beginning 15 min before harvesting tissue. We observed a 92% increase in EBD in the stimulated versus nonstimulated leg (19.1 ± 3.8 vs. 9.9 ± 1 µg/g dry tissue; P < 0.05). The shorter duration of insulin infusion was chosen because of the short circulating half-life (<5 min) for intact insulin.
In the present study, we observed that skeletal muscle contraction increased the skeletal muscle microvascular volume accessible to microbubbles at a lower frequency threshold (0.1 Hz) than that required to produce sustained increases in total FBF (>0.5 Hz). Our finding that there was a two- to threefold increase in MBV with 10 min of 0.1-Hz stimulation (Fig. 2B) underscores the sensitive nature of microvascular recruitment. Our present data agree with a previous report from our laboratory (34) that 2-Hz stimulation increased MBV twofold in addition to increasing FBF. The marked increases in MBV at stimulation frequencies much lower than those required to produce any sustained increases in total flow suggest that muscle contraction recruits microvessels via a mechanism that is distinct from that involving vasodilation of feed arterioles. We previously (29) reported that incremental increases in plasma insulin likewise recruit skeletal muscle capillaries at insulin concentrations lower than that required to increase total blood flow. However, although insulin-mediated increases in MBV are blocked and hindleg glucose uptake is partially blunted by infusion of the NO inhibitor L-NAME (33), in the present study, contraction-mediated increases are not. Although L-NAME at the dose used inhibits insulin-induced increases in MBV and in FBF, it had no effect on microvascular recruitment, and total flow was unchanged or increased in response to low-frequency contraction. We observed a similar rise in MAP with L-NAME when given with systemic insulin (33,39). Thus, L-NAME overcame the modest dilating action of insulin on resistance vessels. Compared with insulin, exercise is a much more potent stimulus to increase flow. It appears that the effect of exercise to locally vasodilate the exercising leg at a time when L-NAME has raised systemic pressure may account for the observed flow increase in the stimulated leg. We cannot exclude other possible systemic effects (e.g., sympatholysis) of L-NAME that may have contributed to vasodilation in the stimulated limb. Although differences among experimental preparation must be considered, this agrees with some (41,42) but not other (43,44) previous reports. These data suggest that low-frequency muscle contraction acts through an NO-independent mechanism distinct from that induced by insulin to recruit muscle microvasculature.
A greater endothelial surface area (i.e., increased MBV) is one of several variables that can promote movement of macromolecules across the capillary endothelium. This follows from consideration of Fick's Law, a simple model for diffusion of a solute across a membrane: F = Q(A – I)(1 – e–PS/Q), where F is flux; Q is plasma flow; A and I are solute concentrations in the arterial and interstitial compartments, respectively; P is the permeability coefficient; and S is the available surface area (45,46). From this basic model, it is apparent that even in the absence of the changes of plasma (blood) flow, increases in either surface area or the permeability coefficient of the endothelial barrier will increase flux. We found that low-frequency contraction recruitment was accompanied by an increase of Immunostaining of frozen skeletal muscle sections showed that the systemic flush of ice-cold saline was effective in removing EBD from the intravascular compartment (Fig. 4). When compared with the nonstimulated control leg, it was clear that the 0.1 Hz–stimulated muscle fibers appeared to have a greater amount of EBD within muscle interstitium. We recognize the empiric nature of this flushing process. Although it is possible that both the endothelial cell and glycocalyx of the endothelial lumen could contribute to some of the dye content measured in muscle tissue, some of this may be lost in the flushing process. However, the confocal images verified that EBD that entered the interstitium of skeletal muscle and not dye left resident in the expanded microvasculature accounted for the increased EBD content. Our observation that even very low–frequency, short-duration isometric contraction markedly increases microvascular perfusion is consistent with the coupling between motor units and microvascular units proposed by Fuglevand and Segal (48). Results obtained using 125I-insulin as a tracer support the hypothesis that low-frequency contraction, in addition to recruiting capillaries and promoting albumin movement into muscle, also enhances insulin TET (Fig. 5). Recent results from our laboratory indicate that as with albumin, the movement of insulin across the endothelium is a receptor-mediated process that may involve caveolae (49). The increase in TET of insulin is less dramatic than that for albumin. It is likely that this is at least in part due to the shorter time interval (5 min) selected for the insulin compared with the 15 min used with EBD. The 5-min infusion time was selected to minimize the time available for metabolism of the iodinated insulin. We confirmed that at 5 min after administration of the 125I-insulin, 90% of the radioactivity in plasma remained bound to the insulin (as estimated by trichloroacetic acid precipitation). These data suggest that low-frequency contraction acutely enhanced the transfer of intact iodinated insulin across the capillary endothelium, as was the case observed for the EBD-albumin complex. However, our results do not discount the possibility that low-frequency contraction may also induce changes in the luminal composition of the capillary endothelium (e.g., altered glycocalyx profile, increased presence of insulin receptors at the membrane, increased numbers of caveolae, etc.), which could also explain the observed increase in 125I-insulin content in muscle tissue. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that brief (0.5-ms duration) low-frequency (0.1 Hz) muscle contraction fully recruits the microvasculature via an NO-independent pathway in the absence of any measurable increase in total blood flow. Furthermore, contraction-mediated recruitment promotes the egress of both albumin and 125I-insulin from the microvasculature to the muscle. L-NAME did not inhibit muscle uptake of EBD-bound albumin stimulated by low-frequency contracted muscle versus control and even revealed a modest trend upward. However, the duration of microvascular recruitment persistence after acute bouts of exercise or contraction is currently unknown, and it remains to be determined whether NOS inhibition will have an effect on 125I-insulin content in 0.1 Hz–stimulated versus control skeletal muscle. Although our results suggest that this enhanced transport of both albumin and 125I-insulin is associated with increased capillary surface area (MBV), we cannot exclude the possibility that low-frequency contraction might also induce other TET pathways. However, it is clear that low-frequency muscle contraction can facilitate nutrient and hormone delivery to skeletal muscle by providing a greater nutritive flow in vivo. The observation that contraction-enhanced insulin sensitivity is associated with improved microcirculation (19) is of potential importance for our understanding of the beneficial effects of acute exercise, and this potential is underscored by recent human studies demonstrating dramatic microvascular recruitment by low-frequency, low-intensity exercise (50). These findings may, in part, explain the enhanced insulin-mediated glucose disposal that accompanies exercise.
A.C.I. has received a predoctoral fellowship grant (0615460U) from the American Heart Association. E.J.B. has received National Institutes of Health Grants DK-57878 and DK-063609. The University of Virginia Histology Core assisted in the preparation of frozen sections of muscle tissue. We thank Dr. Brian Duling and Katherine Day for help with the confocal imaging.
Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 5 January 2007. DOI: 10.2337/db07-0020. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Received for publication January 5, 2007 and accepted in revised form June 1, 2007
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