< Back to previous page

Publication

Muscle Oxygen Supply and Use in Type 1 Diabetes, From Ambient Air to the Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Subtitle:Is There a Limiting Step?

OBJECTIVE: Long before clinical complications of type 1 diabetes (T1D) develop, oxygen supply and use can be altered during activities of daily life. We examined in patients with uncomplicated T1D all steps of the oxygen pathway, from the lungs to the mitochondria, using an integrative ex vivo (muscle biopsies) and in vivo (during exercise) approach.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We compared 16 adults with T1D with 16 strictly matched healthy control subjects. We assessed lung diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide and nitric oxide, exercise-induced changes in arterial O2 content (SaO2, PaO2, hemoglobin), muscle blood volume, and O2 extraction (via near-infrared spectroscopy). We analyzed blood samples for metabolic and hormonal vasoactive moieties and factors that are able to shift the O2-hemoglobin dissociation curve. Mitochondrial oxidative capacities were assessed in permeabilized vastus lateralis muscle fibers.

RESULTS: Lung diffusion capacity and arterial O2 transport were normal in patients with T1D. However, those patients displayed blunted exercise-induced increases in muscle blood volume, despite higher serum insulin, and in O2 extraction, despite higher erythrocyte 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. Although complex I- and complex II-supported mitochondrial respirations were unaltered, complex IV capacity (relative to complex I capacity) was impaired in patients with T1D, and this was even more apparent in those with long-standing diabetes and high HbA1c. [Formula: see text]O2max was lower in patients with T1D than in the control subjects.

CONCLUSIONS: Early defects in microvascular delivery of blood to skeletal muscle and in complex IV capacity in the mitochondrial respiratory chain may negatively impact aerobic fitness. These findings are clinically relevant considering the main role of skeletal muscle oxidation in whole-body glucose disposal.

Journal: Diabetes Care
ISSN: 0149-5992
Issue: 1
Volume: 43
Pages: 209-218
Keywords:Adolescent, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Cell Respiration, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/metabolism, Electron Transport/physiology, Exercise/physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Mitochondria, Muscle/metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism, Oxygen/analysis, Oxygen Consumption/physiology, Oxyhemoglobins/analysis, Respiration, Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared, Young Adult
Accessibility:Open