Metabolism - Clinical and Experimental
Volume 47, Issue 7 , Pages 777-782, July 1998

Substrate oxidation during exercise in the rat cannot fully account for training-induced changes in macronutrients selection

Laboratoire de Nutrition Humaine et Physiologie Intestinale, Institut National Recherche Agronomique—Institut National Agronomique Paris Grignon, Paris, France

Received 10 June 1997; accepted 21 January 1998.

Abstract 

This study investigated spontaneous dietary adaptation to regular exercise in relation to substrate oxidation measured during exercise. Male Wistar rats were offered permanent access to the three sources of macronutrients supplemented with minerals and vitamins. The rats remained sedentary or were trained daily during 3 weeks at moderate intensity (20 m · min−1, 2 hours). Body weight, total caloric intake, and macronutrients selection were recorded throughout the experiment. Energy expenditure and substrate oxidation were measured before, during, and after an exercise identical for trained and untrained rats (10 m · min−1, 1 hour). Training reduced body weight gain (2.27 v 5.57 g · day−1), increased protein intake (52.6% v 39.2%), and decreased carbohydrate intake (21.3% v 39.5%). Basal and running energy expenditure, as well as glucose and lipid oxidation, remained essentially comparable in trained and untrained rats. The relative contribution of glucose oxidation (Gox) to total energy expenditure decreased during exercise (52.2%, average of all rats) relative to before exercise (60.8%). Gox during exercise was positively correlated with resting Gox before exercise, showing that preexercise substrate oxidation was a strong determinant of running substrate oxidation. However, the slope was smaller for the trained than for the untrained rats, showing that exercise increases Gox less in trained rats than in untrained ones. We conclude from this study that, since food selection but not substrate oxidation changed following training, food intake adapted to substrate requirements induced by regular training and not the contrary. However, large differences remained between the mixture ingested, in which lipids accounted for only 26% of the energy, and the mixture oxidized during exercise, in which lipids accounted for 50.7% of the substrate oxidized. Such a difference may be related to metabolic requirements during the rest of the day and/or to the distribution of macronutrients intake relative to exercise. This question deserves further investigation with recording of macronutrients selection, energy expenditure, and substrate oxidation over 24 hours.

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PII: S0026-0495(98)90111-1

Metabolism - Clinical and Experimental
Volume 47, Issue 7 , Pages 777-782, July 1998