Altered Skeletal Muscle Subsarcolemmal Mitochondrial Compartment During Catch-Up Fat After Caloric Restriction

  1. Raffaella Crescenzo1,
  2. Lillà Lionetti1,
  3. Maria Pina Mollica1,
  4. Marialuisa Ferraro1,
  5. Elvira D’Andrea1,
  6. Davide Mainieri2,
  7. Abdul G. Dulloo2,
  8. Giovanna Liverini1 and
  9. Susanna Iossa1
  1. 1Department of Biological Sciences, Section of Physiology, University of Naples, Naples, Italy
  2. 2Department of Medicine, Division of Physiology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Susanna Iossa, Dipartimento delle Scienze Biologiche, Sezione di Fisiologia, Via Mezzocannone 8, I-80134, Napoli, Italy. E-mail: susiossa{at}unina.it

Abstract

An accelerated rate of fat recovery (catch-up fat) and insulin resistance are characteristic features of weight recovery after caloric restriction, with implications for the pathophysiology of catch-up growth and weight fluctuations. Using a previously described rat model of weight recovery in which catch-up fat and skeletal muscle insulin resistance have been linked to suppressed thermogenesis per se, we investigated alterations in mitochondrial energetics and oxidative stress in subsarcolemmal (SS) and intermyofibrillar (IMF) skeletal muscle mitochondria. After 2 weeks of semistarvation followed by 1 week of refeeding, the refed rats show persistent and selective reductions in SS mitochondrial mass (assessed from citrate synthase activity in tissue homogenate and isolated mitochondria) and oxidative capacity. Furthermore, the refed rats show, in both SS and IMF muscle mitochondria, a lower aconitase activity (whose inactivation is an index of increased reactive oxygen species [ROS]), associated with higher superoxide dismutase activity and increased proton leak. Taken together, these studies suggest that diminished skeletal muscle mitochondrial mass and function, specifically in the SS mitochondrial compartment, contribute to the high metabolic efficiency for catch-up fat after caloric restriction and underscore a potential link between diminished skeletal muscle SS mitochondrial energetics, increased ROS concentration, and insulin resistance during catch-up fat.

Footnotes

  • The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

    • Accepted May 2, 2006.
    • Received March 8, 2006.
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