Muscle mitochondrial capacity exceeds maximal oxygen delivery in humans

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Robert Christopher Boushel
  • Erich Gnaiger
  • Jose A L Calbet
  • Jose Gonzalez-Alonso
  • Cynthia Wright-Paradis
  • Hans Sondergaard
  • Ignacio Ara
  • Helge, Jørn Wulff
  • Bengt Saltin
Across a wide range of species and body mass a close matching exists between maximal conductive oxygen delivery and mitochondrial respiratory rate. In this study we investigated in humans how closely in-vivo maximal oxygen consumption (VO(2) max) is matched to state 3 muscle mitochondrial respiration. High resolution respirometry was used to quantify mitochondrial respiration from the biopsies of arm and leg muscles while in-vivo arm and leg VO(2) were determined by the Fick method during leg cycling and arm cranking. We hypothesized that muscle mitochondrial respiratory rate exceeds that of systemic oxygen delivery. The state 3 mitochondrial respiration of the deltoid muscle (4.3±0.4 mmol o(2)kg(-1) min(-1)) was similar to the in-vivo VO(2) during maximal arm cranking (4.7±0.5 mmol O(2) kg(-1) min(-1)) with 6 kg muscle. In contrast, the mitochondrial state 3 of the quadriceps was 6.9±0.5 mmol O(2) kg(-1) min(-1), exceeding the in-vivo leg VO(2) max (5.0±0.2 mmol O(2) kg(-1) min(-1)) during leg cycling with 20 kg muscle (P
Original languageEnglish
JournalMitochondrion
Volume11
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)303-7
Number of pages5
ISSN1567-7249
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2011

    Research areas

  • Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mitochondria, Muscle, Oxygen

ID: 33815716