Hostname: page-component-6766d58669-bkrcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-19T15:59:37.147Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Lactate and the GPR81 receptor in metabolic regulation: implications for adipose tissue function and fatty acid utilisation by muscle during exercise

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2011

Kieron Rooney
Affiliation:
Exercise, Health and Performance, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, East Street, Lidcombe NSW 2141, Australia Faculty of Medicine, Boden Institute, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
Paul Trayhurn*
Affiliation:
Clore Laboratory, University of Buckingham, Hunter Street, Buckingham MK18 1EG, UK Obesity Biology Research Unit, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Diseases, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GA, UK
*
*Corresponding author: Professor P. Trayhurn, email paul.trayhurn@buckingham.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Lactate is increasingly recognised to be more than a simple end product of anaerobic glycolysis. Skeletal muscle and white adipose tissue are considered to be the main sites of lactate production and release. Recent studies have demonstrated that there is a specific G-protein coupled receptor for lactate, GPR81, which is expressed primarily in adipose tissue, and also in muscle. Lactate inhibits lipolysis in adipose tissue by mediating, through GPR81, the anti-lipolytic action of insulin. A high proportion (50 % or more) of the glucose utilised by white adipose tissue is converted to lactate and lactate production by the tissue increases markedly in obesity; this is likely to reflect a switch towards anaerobic metabolism with the development of hypoxia in the tissue. During exercise, there is a shift in fuel utilisation by muscle from lipid to carbohydrate, but this does not appear to be a result of the inhibition of lipolysis in the main adipose tissue depots by muscle-derived lactate. It is suggested instead that a putative autocrine lactate loop in myocytes may regulate fuel utilisation by muscle during exercise, operating via a muscle GPR81 receptor. In addition to being an important substrate, lactate is a key signal in metabolic regulation.

Information

Type
Horizons in Nutritional Science
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2011
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Regulation of fuel utilisation in skeletal muscle during exercise. Adrenaline release and subsequent activation of a G-protein coupled receptor (ER) results in elevated cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels and activation of protein kinase A (PKA). Two key targets of PKA include glycogen phosphorylase and hormone-sensitive lipase, which result in elevated rates of glycogenolysis and lipolysis, respectively. Liberated NEFA can be oxidised within the mitochondria and contribute to ATP re-synthesis through oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos). Liberated glucose-6-phosphate drives elevated rates of glycolysis, leading to elevated pyruvate production. Pyruvate can feed into mitochondrial OxPhos. As OxPhos approaches maximal rates, excess pyruvate production drives elevated rates of lactate production within muscle cells. Lactate is transported from myocytes through a specific monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) and accumulates in the plasma. Currently accepted theories suggest that the lactate can be taken up by the heart or other oxidative muscle for conversion to pyruvate and use in OxPhos; lactate can be utilised by the liver as a source for gluconeogenesis or may be transported to adipose tissue where it acts to inhibit adipocyte lipolysis (all shown in filled lines). The dashed lines represent the proposal that if skeletal muscle is shown to contain membrane bound GPR81, then it may facilitate an autocrine function of lactate whereby a negative-feedback loop is identified. In this instance, rising cellular lactate concentrations act as a signal by which fat utilisation is restricted (through reduced intramyocellular lipolysis) and carbohydrate oxidation becomes limiting (through reduced glycogenolysis). In the first instance, lactate serves as a metabolic switch between fat and carbohydrate oxidation as exercise intensity increases and then as a peripheral signal of fatigue through limiting complete exhaustion of glycogen stores.