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Featured researches published by Bodil Vistisen.


The Journal of Physiology | 2004

Regulation of hormone‐sensitive lipase activity and Ser563 and Ser565 phosphorylation in human skeletal muscle during exercise

Carsten Roepstorff; Bodil Vistisen; Morten Donsmark; Jakob Nielsen; Henrik Galbo; Kevin A. Green; D. Grahame Hardie; Jørgen F. P. Wojtaszewski; Erik A. Richter; Bente Kiens

Hormone‐sensitive lipase (HSL) catalyses the hydrolysis of myocellular triacylglycerol (MCTG), which is a potential energy source during exercise. Therefore, it is important to elucidate the regulation of HSL activity in human skeletal muscle during exercise. The main purpose of the present study was to investigate the role of 5′AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) in the regulation of muscle HSL activity and Ser565 phosphorylation (the presumed AMPK target site) in healthy, moderately trained men during 60 min bicycling (65%). α2AMPK activity during exercise was manipulated by studying subjects with either low (LG) or high (HG) muscle glycogen content. HSL activity was distinguished from the activity of other neutral lipases by immunoinhibition of HSL using an anti‐HSL antibody. During exercise a 62% higher (P < 0.01)α2AMPK activity in LG than in HG was paralleled by a similar difference (61%, P < 0.01) in HSL Ser565 phosphorylation but without any difference between trials in HSL activity or MCTG hydrolysis. HSL activity was increased (117%, P < 0.05) at 30 min of exercise but not at 60 min of exercise. In both trials, HSL phosphorylation on Ser563 (a presumed PKA target site) was not increased by exercise despite a fourfold increase (P < 0.001) in plasma adrenaline. ERK1/2 phosphorylation was increased by exercise in both trials (P < 0.001) and was higher in LG than in HG both at rest and during exercise (P= 0.06). In conclusion, the present study suggests that AMPK phosphorylates HSL on Ser565 in human skeletal muscle during exercise with reduced muscle glycogen. Apparently, HSL Ser565 phosphorylation by AMPK during exercise had no effect on HSL activity. Alternatively, other factors including ERK may have counterbalanced any effect of AMPK on HSL activity.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2008

Effect of gender on lipid-induced insulin resistance in obese subjects

Bodil Vistisen; Lars Hellgren; Torill Vadset; Celena Scheede-Bergdahl; Jørn Wulff Helge; Flemming Dela; Bente Stallknecht

OBJECTIVE In obese subjects, chronically elevated plasma concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids (NEFAs) exert a marked risk to contract insulin resistance and subsequently type 2 diabetes. When NEFA is acutely increased due to i.v. infusion of lipid, glucose disposal during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp is reduced. This effect has been explained by a NEFA-induced decrease in skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity caused by accumulation of the lipid intermediates such as ceramide and diacylglycerol in the myocytes. However, neither the lipid-induced reduction of glucose disposal nor the intramyocellular lipid deposition has been compared directly in obese females and males. DESIGN We studied eight obese females and eight obese males (body mass index (BMI): 32.6+/-1.4 and 32.8+/-0.8 respectively, non significant (NS)) matched for cardiorespiratory fitness relative to lean body mass (43.7+/-1.6 and 47.6+/-1.3 ml/kg min respectively, NS). METHODS Each subject underwent two hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps with infusion of lipid or saline respectively. Furthermore, the subjects exercised during the last half an hour of each clamp. RESULTS The lipid-induced reduction in glucose disposal during the clamp was similar in females and males (46+/-10 and 60+/-4% respectively, NS). However, whole-body insulin sensitivity as well as non-oxidative glucose disposal was higher in obese females compared with obese males both during lipid and saline infusion (P<0.001 and P=0.01 respectively). Muscle ceramide, triacylglycerol (TAG), diacylglycerol (DAG), and glycogen content were similar between sexes and remained unchanged during the clamp and when exercise was superimposed. CONCLUSIONS The lipid-induced inhibition of glucose disposal is similar in obese females and males. However, obese females are more insulin sensitive compared with obese males (both during saline and lipid infusion), which is not due to differences in the concentration of the muscle lipid intermediates such as ceramide and DAG.


Proceedings of the Nutrition Society | 2004

Studies of plasma membrane fatty acid-binding protein and other lipid-binding proteins in human skeletal muscle.

Carsten Roepstorff; J. Wulff Helge; Bodil Vistisen; Bente Kiens

The first putative fatty acid transporter identified was plasma membrane fatty acid-binding protein (FABPpm). Later it was demonstrated that this protein is identical to the mitochondrial isoform of the enzyme aspartate aminotransferase. In recent years data from several cell types have emerged, indicating that FABPpm plays a role in the transport of long-chain saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. In the limited number of studies in human skeletal muscle it has been demonstrated that dietary composition and exercise training can influence the content of FABPpm. Ingestion of a fat-rich diet induces an increase in FABPpm protein content in human skeletal muscle in contrast to the decrease seen during consumption of a carbohydrate-rich diet. A similar effect of a fat-rich diet is also observed for cytosolic fatty acid-binding protein and fatty acid translocase/CD36 protein expression. Exercise training up regulates FABPpm protein content in skeletal muscle, but only in male subjects; no significant differences were observed in muscle FABPpm content in a cross-sectional study of female volunteers of varying training status, even though muscle FABPpm content did not depend on gender in the untrained state. A higher utilization of plasma long-chain fatty acids during exercise in males compared with females could explain the gender-dependent influence of exercise training on FABPpm. The mechanisms involved in the regulation of the function and expression of FABPpm protein remain to be clarified.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2009

Skeletal muscle eEF2 and 4EBP1 phosphorylation during endurance exercise is dependent on intensity and muscle fiber type

Adam J. Rose; Bruno Bisiani; Bodil Vistisen; Bente Kiens; Erik A. Richter

Protein synthesis in skeletal muscle is known to decrease during exercise, and it has been suggested that this may depend on the magnitude of the relative metabolic stress within the contracting muscle. To examine the mechanisms behind this, the effect of exercise intensity on skeletal muscle eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2) and eukaryotic initiation factor 4E binding protein 1 (4EBP1) phosphorylation, key components in the mRNA translation machinery, were examined together with AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in healthy young men. Skeletal muscle eEF2 phosphorylation at Thr56 increased during exercise but was not influenced by exercise intensity, and was lower than rest 30 min after exercise. On the other hand, 4EBP1 phosphorylation at Thr37/46 decreased during exercise, and this decrease was greater at higher exercise intensities and was similar to rest 30 min after exercise. AMPK activity, as indexed by AMPK alpha-subunit phosphorylation at Thr172 and phosphorylation of the AMPK substrate ACCbeta at Ser221, was higher with higher exercise intensities, and these indices were higher than rest after high-intensity exercise only. Using immunohistochemistry, it was shown that the increase in skeletal muscle eEF2 Thr56 phosphorylation was restricted to type I myofibers. Taken together, these data suggest that the depression of skeletal muscle protein synthesis with endurance-type exercise may be regulated at both initiation (i.e., 4EBP1) and elongation (i.e., eEF2) steps, with eEF2 phosphorylation contributing at all exercise intensities but 4EBP1 dephosphorylation contributing to a greater extent at high vs. low exercise intensities.


The Journal of Physiology | 2004

Differential effect of bicycling exercise intensity on activity and phosphorylation of atypical protein kinase C and extracellular signal‐regulated protein kinase in skeletal muscle

Erik A. Richter; Bodil Vistisen; Stine J. Maarbjerg; Mini P. Sajan; Robert V. Farese; Bente Kiens

Atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) and extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK) are emerging as important signalling molecules in the regulation of metabolism and gene expression in skeletal muscle. Exercise is known to increase activity of aPKC and ERK in skeletal muscle but the effect of exercise intensity hereon has not been studied. Furthermore, the relationship between activity and phosphorylation of the two enzymes during exercise is unknown. Nine healthy young men exercised for 30 min on a bicycle ergometer on two occasions. One occasion consisted of three consecutive 10 min bouts of 35, 60 and 85% of peak pulmonary oxygen uptake and the second of one 30 min bout at 35% of . Both trials also included 30 min recovery. Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis muscle before and after each exercise bout. Exercise increased muscle aPKC activity at 35%, whereupon no further increase was observed at higher exercise intensities. Activation of aPKC was not accompanied by increased phosphorylation of aPKC Thr410/403. ERK1/2 activity increased in a similar pattern to aPKC, reaching maximal activity at 35%, whereas ERK1 Thr202/Tyr204 and ERK2 Thr183/Tyr185 phosphorylation increased with increasing exercise intensity. Thus, aPKC and ERK1/2 activity in muscle during exercise did not correspond to phosphorylation of sites on aPKC or ERK1/2, respectively, which are considered important for their activation. It is concluded that assessment of aPKC and ERK1/2 activity in muscle using phosphospecific antibodies did not reflect direct activity measurements on immunoprecipitated enzyme in vitro. Thus, estimation of enzyme activity during exercise by use of phosphospecific antibodies should not be performed uncritically. In addition, increase in muscle activity of aPKC or ERK1/2 during exercise is not closely related to energy demands of the muscle but may serve other regulatory or permissive functions in muscle.


Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews | 2005

Intramuscular triacylglycerol in energy metabolism during exercise in humans.

Carsten Roepstorff; Bodil Vistisen; Bente Kiens

Intramuscular triacylglycerol (IMTG) represents an energy store that can be used during exercise, when it may contribute up to 20% of total energy turnover depending on diet, gender, and exercise type. It is important to consider how measurements of IMTG have been performed. Hormone-sensitive lipase is thought to regulate breakdown of IMTG during exercise.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2006

Sex differences in hormone-sensitive lipase expression, activity, and phosphorylation in skeletal muscle at rest and during exercise

Carsten Roepstorff; Morten Donsmark; Maja Thiele; Bodil Vistisen; Greg Stewart; Kristian Vissing; Peter Schjerling; D. Grahame Hardie; H. Galbo; Bente Kiens


Journal of Lipid Research | 2004

Sarcolemmal FAT/CD36 in human skeletal muscle colocalizes with caveolin-3 and is more abundant in type 1 than in type 2 fibers

Bodil Vistisen; Kirstine Roepstorff; Carsten Roepstorff; Arend Bonen; Bo van Deurs; Bente Kiens


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2004

Regulation of plasma long-chain fatty acid oxidation in relation to uptake in human skeletal muscle during exercise

Carsten Roepstorff; Bodil Vistisen; Kirstine Roepstorff; Bente Kiens


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2006

Attenuated gastric distress but no benefit to performance with adaptation to octanoate-rich esterified oils in well-trained male cyclists

Megan S. Thorburn; Bodil Vistisen; Rhys M. Thorp; Mike J. Rockell; Asker E. Jeukendrup; Xuebing Xu; David S. Rowlands

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Bente Kiens

University of Copenhagen

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Carl-Erik Høy

Technical University of Denmark

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Lars Hellgren

Technical University of Denmark

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