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Departments of 1 Physiology, 2 Health and Exercise Science, and 3 Food Science and Human Nutrition, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523; 4 Center for Human Nutrition, University of Colorado Health Science Center, Denver, Colorado 80262; and 5 Eli Lilly Corporation, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285
This cross-sectional
investigation sought to determine the relationship between selected
metabolic, endocrine, and anthropometric factors and skeletal muscle
UCP3 mRNA in healthy adult humans. Twenty-four healthy adults (13 male
and 11 female) across a range of aerobic capacity, age, and body
composition were studied. Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus
lateralis, from which UCP3 mRNA was quantified by Northern blot, and
fiber type was determined by use of the myosin ATPase staining
procedure. In addition, resting energy expenditure and maximum rate of
oxygen consumption were determined by indirect calorimetry, body
composition was determined by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, and
fasting plasma leptin and insulin were determined by ELISA. UCP3 mRNA
was correlated positively with the percent type I fibers
(r = 0.842, P < 0.001), plasma leptin
(r = 0.454, P = 0.026), and plasma
insulin (r = 0.615, P < 0.001) and
inversely to age (r =
0.411, P = 0.046). Stepwise multiple regression analysis determined that percent type I muscle fibers was the best predictor of vastus lateralis UCP3
mRNA, and no other variable entered the equation (model
r2 = 0.66). This study suggests that of the
variables measured, UCP3 mRNA is primarily related to skeletal muscle
fiber type in healthy adults. The factors that contribute to
fiber-specific differences in UCP3 mRNA expression will need to be
examined in future studies.
uncoupling proteins; leptin; metabolic rate
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